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  • prepositions - Scheduled on vs scheduled for - English Language . . .
    What is the difference between the following two expressions: My interview is scheduled on the 27th of June at 8:00 AM My interview is scheduled for the 27th of June at 8:00 AM
  • Scheduled to vs. scheduled for - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    I suspect that this is the cause of the piece in question The author had a choice between "scheduled for a confirmation" and "scheduled to appear at a confirmation" and between the two choices, produced a bastard of the pair I know that many of the mistakes I catch in my own writing have such half-choices as their cause
  • “as schedule” vs. “as scheduled” - English Language Usage . . .
    You say on schedule or behind schedule which consist of: [preposition] + schedule (noun) However, you say as scheduled and not as schedule Why? What are the differences between these phrases?
  • prepositions - Scheduled FOR or IN the next days - English Language . . .
    To add more into the mix, I would say "Scheduled in" (verb preposition) can be used for creating a schedule — "The timetable for the June exams will be scheduled in the last week of May" People also use "scheduled-in" in place of just "scheduled" to mean the same thing — "I have your appointment scheduled-in for next Monday" See also this question So would normally know by context which
  • Scheduled to September vs. scheduled in September
    You can use "scheduled for [time period]", but not "scheduled to [time period]" The expressions "scheduled to take place in [time period]" or "scheduled to happen in [time period]" are acceptable, too "Scheduled in [time period]" is sometimes seen, but I'm inclined to read this as elliptic short for "scheduled to take place in [time period]"
  • The British pronunciation of the word schedule
    The earliest English pronunciation of schedule is no longer used, as far as I know: it was something like ˈsɛdjul (compare schism, which some still pronounce as “sizm”) The OED says In the 16th cent , both in French and English, the spellings scedule and schedule, imitating the contemporary forms of the Latin word, were used by a few writers In French this fashion was transient, but
  • What is difference between timetable and schedule?
    To a certain extent, especially in the second half of the last century, “timetable” was the common British English usage, whereas “schedule” was (and still is) the common US English usage This can be seen from the Google ngrams, where the use of “timetable” in the US is almost negligible compared to that of “schedule” The results for British English show a quite different
  • word choice - Today afternoon vs Today in the afternoon? - English . . .
    Neither are clauses, but "today in the afternoon" is grammatical (adverbial phrase of time), while "today afternoon" is not I would also suggest "this afternoon" as a more succinct and idiomatic alternative to "today in the afternoon"
  • word choice - How to say: I will try to move it to an earlier time or . . .
    I have a meeting that I think should be moved to an earlier time What is the best way to say it? E g if I wanted to move it to a later time, I can use the word "delay": "I would like to delay
  • When do I use I and I have? [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    The answer is far too long, and too advanced for a beginner whose question was "when I do I use "I" and "I have"? Clearly, the OP is not even aware of the structure Present Perfect It would have been better to post a few links to previous questions on this site There are literally hundreds of questions about PP Hundreds I mean just look at the tag selected by the OP: "have" How can you





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