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read 'by' Monday morning.



 
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read 'by' Monday morning. #1 (permalink) Sun Oct 11, 2009 14:14 pm   read 'by' Monday morning.
 

- May I encourage you to have chapter 5 read by Monday morning.
VS.
- May I encourage you to have chapter 5 read on Monday.

Does the first sentece mean we should read it on Monday? OR we should finished reading it before monday?
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read 'by' Monday morning. #2 (permalink) Sun Oct 11, 2009 14:42 pm   read 'by' Monday morning.
 

Hi,

'On Monday' means 'on that day'. 'By Monday morning' suggests that is the deadline/the latest time by which it should be read.

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read 'by' Monday morning. #3 (permalink) Sun Oct 11, 2009 19:48 pm   read 'by' Monday morning.
 

Both of these suggest that the chapter should have been read before Monday. The second implies, to me, an elliptical clause missing. So: "May I encourage you to have chapter 5 read on Monday" implies "May I encourage you to have chapter 5 read (before you get here) on Monday"
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"Where have you been to these holidays?" Present perfect/simple past | We can meet outside the cinema. vs We can meet in front of the cinema.
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