Google
English-Test.net
Find penpals and make new friends today!
 
to arouse; to bring out; to summon; to wake
evoke
stem
discard
stretch
full quiz correct answer
 
Username
Password
 Remember me? 
Search   Album   FAQ   Memberlist   Profile   Private messages   Register   Log in 

"He arrived at about noun" At as a preposition for expressing time.



 
ESL/EFL Worksheets and Handouts for Students Printable, photocopiable, clearly structured
Designed for teachers and individual learners
For use in a classroom, at home, on your PC
ESL Forum | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms
Time expressions: At this moment, every day, never, usually, sometimes, now... | Can I say so?
listening exercisestell a friend
Message
Author
"He arrived at about noun" At as a preposition for expressing time. #1 (permalink) Fri Dec 26, 2008 1:37 am   "He arrived at about noun" At as a preposition for expressing time.
 

"He arrived at about noon".

Should one omit "at" in this sentence?

Thanks in advance.
God bless.
Cisco.
_________________
Please, always correct me if I have made any kind of mistakes in my posts.
Cisco795
I'm here quite often ;-)


Joined: 31 Aug 2008
Posts: 124
Location: Mèxico

"He arrived at about noun" At as a preposition for expressing time. #2 (permalink) Fri Dec 26, 2008 5:48 am   "He arrived at about noun" At as a preposition for expressing time.
 

.
You can, but you needn't.
.
_________________
Native English teacher at Mister Micawber's
Mister Micawber
Language Coach


Joined: 17 Jul 2005
Posts: 13015

Learn all about English adverbs in this amusing storyEnglish grammar exercises — improve your English knowledge and vocabulary skillsAre you a native speaker of English? Then you should read this!Read these English anecdotes and maybe smile today? Subscribe to free email English course
Display posts from previous:   
Time expressions: At this moment, every day, never, usually, sometimes, now... | Can I say so?
ESL Forum | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms All times are GMT + 1 Hour
Page 1 of 1
Latest topics on English Forums
Warm Hearted vs Warm Bloodedfor or in? (For less than ten years, a third of Vietnam's population, or as many)Where do you hang out?Can an adverb modify a pronoun?what are the main points of developing English?Usage of leverage. What does this mean?where do we use "as"?Text: Solar energy is a long last source of energy which could be used almost...Difference between imply, indicate and denoteUsage of the word "in-person"'parallel' vs 'parallelly'Good luck to you all? vs Good luck for you all?"Shoppping Habits" and "Getting Discounts"

 
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
Subscribe to FREE email English course
First name E-mail