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  1. Whereas "at 9 o'clock" implies starting at 9, but continuing for an flexible length of time; similarly "at Christmas" implies starting at some point during the Christmas period, not necessarily "on Christmas Day"; "at the weekend" implies some point during the weekend which could either be Saturday or Sunday or both.

  2. Feb 19, 2006 · I normally work out Monday to Friday but at the weekend I tend not to exercise at all because weekend is (the weekend is) the time that I reward myself for 5 days of working out hard. So, during the weekend, I just go out with friends and have a lot of fun. (I wrote this after I read other posts. I hope it's right)

  3. whereas Britons favour "at the weekend" Both nations also use over the weekend (for Americans, this is actually the most common form; for Brits, it's a close second). But for Brits, during the weekend is the least favoured of these top four prepositions (it's second-to-bottom for Americans, who really don't like at the weekend).

  4. Aug 16, 2012 · So technically part of a weekend starts at the beginning and another weekend starts at the end of the week. So when someone says, for example, the weekend of the 24th (the 24th being a Monday) they are not using good grammar or reference. The 24th doesn’t fall on a weekend day ... therefor there is NO “weekend of the 24th.

  5. Nov 18, 2012 · "It's weekend" is abnormal and ungrammatical. "It's Saturday" is normal, grammatical, and idiomatic. "It's the weekend" is normal, grammatical, and idiomatic. "It's a weekend" is normal, grammatical, and idiomatic. The latter two sentences have slightly different meanings. "It's the weekend" is an announcement about the date, as in: "Today is ...

  6. May 2, 2017 · As has been pointed out several times on this site, Her Majesty and her subjects never do things "ON" the weekend. They do things "on" Saturday, and "on" Sunday, but NEVER "on" the weekend. They do things AT the weekend and OVER the weekend (seldom "during" the weekend). –

  7. May 7, 2012 · On is slightly vague (possibly deliberately so) and would suggest some time during the weekend, or possibly the whole weekend. For the weekend could mean most of the weekend and possibly the entire weekend, and over the weekend explicitly means the whole weekend — in this context. As @JeffSahol points out, in other contexts (e.g., I'll fix ...

  8. Neither Wishing you a happy weekend nor Wish you a happy weekend would be used in normal conversation. As others have noted, spoken parting platitudes at the end of a week are normally started with have, such as: Have a good weekend; Have a nice weekend; etc. Change the adjective to be what you think most appropriate for the situation.

  9. Jun 13, 2022 · Now, weekend as we now know it, is a U.S. invention. The practice of organising employment in a way that provides for most people not working on both Saturday and Sunday first appeared in the U.S. in early twentieth century, became common in that country in the decades that followed, and then spread to most of the world after the Second World War.

  10. Oct 26, 2005 · "in the weekend long event", "in the weekend profits" are another couple of examples. But I don't think that it applies to the examples from New Zealand (even if they do sound awful to me too). Awful-sounding or not the Kewies may be being logical. Since the weekend is neither a point in time, nor a day, but a period of time, "in" seems more ...

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