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Karsten Brabaender
In Sunday afternoon vs. on Sunday afternoon
I have just taught my students about the prepositions of time: in, on, at."in the morning", "in the evening".and "on Sunday", "on Tuesday".
However, is it now "in Sunday afternoon" or "on Sunday afternoon".
I have googled, but it seems that even natives cannot come to a conlusion on this topic.
In my opinion: if I use "in" the preposition defines the part of day...in Sunday AFTERNOON and Sunday defines the afternoon further. Using on...the prep. goes to the day: on SUNDAY afternoon.
However, anyone here, who can enlighten me?
2014年5月27日 02:36
回答 · 3
1
It's always "on" with days in the examples you give, regardless of if they are qualified by time. "On Sunday afternoon" is correct. A better example for what you are describing, where the preposition changes, would be "In Sunday's class" or "in Sunday's football match", where the preposition becomes 'in' because it is referring primarily to the class/match not the day.
2014年5月27日
Could you please give some examples of instances you have come across of 'in Sunday afternoon' ? As far as I am aware, there is no 'topic' and no lack of conclusion - the only possible form is 'on'. I'd be interested to know where these examples come from.
2014年5月27日
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Karsten Brabaender
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, ドイツ語, 日本語, ラテン語, タイ, ベトナム語
言語学習
タイ, ベトナム語
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