This document provides examples of how to indicate date, month, time and seasons in English using prepositions like "in", "on", and "at". It includes examples like "in January", "on Sunday", "at 7 o'clock", and "in the summer". The document also explains conventions for indicating times like "AM" and "PM" as well as ways to refer to times relative to the hour like "five to...", "ten past...", and "half past...".
This document provides examples of how to indicate date, month, time and seasons in English using prepositions like "in", "on", and "at". It includes examples like "in January", "on Sunday", "at 7 o'clock", and "in the summer". The document also explains conventions for indicating times like "AM" and "PM" as well as ways to refer to times relative to the hour like "five to...", "ten past...", and "half past...".
This document provides examples of how to indicate date, month, time and seasons in English using prepositions like "in", "on", and "at". It includes examples like "in January", "on Sunday", "at 7 o'clock", and "in the summer". The document also explains conventions for indicating times like "AM" and "PM" as well as ways to refer to times relative to the hour like "five to...", "ten past...", and "half past...".
▪ In + years (in 2022) ▪ In + the + morning/ afternoon/ evening ▪ In + seasons (in the winter/ summer/ rainy season) ▪ In + centuries (in the 20th century) ▪ In the 70s, 80s, 90s ON
▪ On + days (on Sunday, on Monday)
▪ On + dates (on February 14, on July 4) ▪ On + specific days (on Christmas day, on my birthday, on the day we met, on the first day of the month) ▪ On + weekend (on the weekend) AT
▪ At clock times (at 7 o’clock, at 12am, at 12pm)
▪ At exact time of a day (at noon/midnight/sunrise/sunset/dawn/night) ▪ At holiday periods (at Christmas times, at Thadingyut holidays)
• Note - tomorrow, yesterday, next, last with no prepositions