
"What day is it today?" vs. "What day is today?"
Which of the following is grammatical? What date/day is it today? What date/day is today?
Horoscopes - St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Horoscopes for readers of STLToday.com and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
word choice - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
I am writing a résumé. I want to specify that I started my education in 2009 and as of now I am at the 4th grade (in other words, still learning), so how should I specify that in résumé: 2009 - pre...
"Today's assumption" or "todays assumption" — which is valid …
The apostrophe indicates possession. Without an apostrophe you are indicating plurality. Since the point you are trying to convey is that the assumption you made yesterday is no longer …
phrases - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
What if it's monday today and they say "a week on monday", does that mean go a week ahead and pick that monday. or go a week ahead and pick the monday you are now on? i.e. if it's …
This weekend vs Next weekend [duplicate] - English Language
Possible Duplicate: What day is next Tuesday? Imagine that it's Monday, the 1st. The weekend would be the 6th & 7th. How do you refer properly to the coming weekend, "This …
Is it correct to use the word "birthday" for the deceased, or is there ...
Today is the 80th anniversary of my uncle's birth. In other words we generally don't consider it somebodies birthday any more (except with a "would have been" qualifier), but particularly for …
Is there a one-word English term for the day after tomorrow?
No. There may have been one, or more, and there may still be dialectal variants around here and there. But there's no general word; instead there's a fixed phrase, which you used: the day …
Understanding "as of", "as at", and "as from"
No, "as of" can mean both - 1) As of today, only three survivors have been found. 2) As of today, all passengers must check their luggage before boarding the plane.
Should 'Today' and 'Tomorrow' be capitalised? [closed]
5 The words today, tomorrow and yesterday are not capitalized. However, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday are capitalized.