
on/at/as at 31st December - WordReference Forums
Feb 1, 2012 · Good morning :) I have a doubt in the following sentence: Participation in warehouse physical inventory procedures: raw materials, goods in process and finished …
December 31 (pronunciation) - WordReference Forums
Dec 30, 2008 · In BE we also say 'on December the 31st', although i do prefer 'on the 31st of December. As Wildan says, however, we'd be more likely to say 'a party on New Year's Eve'. …
before/by/on December 30th - WordReference Forums
Aug 7, 2020 · "On" is fine. On the other hand, "before" sounds very unlikely indeed. "Before" would make a correct sentence, but I would interpret it to mean that if you handed in your …
as at vs. as of - WordReference Forums
Jan 17, 2013 · "As at" means at a particular time. It's used in accounting in reference to, say, a balance sheet, "As at 31 March 2007" meaning it is a snapshot of the position at that date. I …
On or in december - WordReference Forums
Apr 12, 2009 · Hola! Estaba traduciendo esta frase: en diciembre de 1933. Quería saber si mi traducción era correcta On december in 1933 o hay otra mejor.
on the evening of or in the evening of | WordReference Forums
Oct 28, 2014 · on a July morning, on December mornings on the morning of September 15th on Wednesday morning on cold nights Could you describe your son's state of mind on that …
Good Morning / Afternoon / Evening / Night - WordReference …
Nov 8, 2006 · If the presentation starts during or after lunch but before dinner, "Good afternoon." This even applies to a 4 pm presentation in Reykjavik in late December. (If you've never been …
in early December - WordReference Forums
Mar 17, 2012 · If you mean the first ten days of December I would use "early in December". That seems to be too wide a range for "the beginning of December". If you told me you expected to …
in this stage or at this stage? - WordReference Forums
Jul 11, 2011 · I would use, "in this stage" where there are distinct steps/stages in a process. I would use, "at this stage" at any point in a process to mean: as you say, "a paticular point in time"
FR: prochain / dernier - place de l'adjectif - WordReference Forums
Oct 27, 2006 · I looked this up because I noticed that the organiser of a French-speaking group I belong to has written the following in reference to the forthcoming December gathering: …