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florence
"At the very moment" and "right now"
I feel they have the same meaning, I would like to know which one is more frequently used? thanks
Dec 8, 2011 11:54 AM
Answers · 2
4
"At the very moment" does not mean the same thing as "right now".
You use it to compare when A happens when being compared to when B happens.
"At the very moment that the accident happened, Alice was leaving her job."
If you wanted to say the same thing as right now, you would say "At this very moment."
December 8, 2011
Yes, they are similar.
"At this very moment" is a lot clearer and has no ambiguity.
"right now" is ambiguous
December 8, 2011
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florence
Language Skills
English, Mongolian
Learning Language
English
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