“good night” or “good evening” I tell her it's last evening or last night I am in the process of creating a software application which displays a greeting to users based on the time of day
I have come to a blank on what to display to the user when it is late at night
'good night, [user's name]' just doesn't seem right
So, what is an appropriate greeting to use at night time? What can i say about a thing happened at night Someone stole my phone at night Or someone stole my phone in the night
Which one is right to say? The set of words that refers to the sky is Dawn (sky is getting light), sunrise (exactly when the sun is first visible), day or daytime (between sunrise and sunset), sunset (exactly when the sun is last visible), dusk (sky is getting dark), night or nighttime (sky is dark). Which sentence below is grammatically correct
I didn't answer your questions because i had fallen asleep early last night
I didn't answer your questions because i fell asleep early last night. He usually comes round here about 8 o'clock of an evening, or 10 o'clock of a morning, or of a saturday afternoon I tend to associate it with londoners. 2nd show = at night ( which ends at midnight ) due to the large number of screens and showings in multiplexes, nowadays the cinemas only refer to the time of a show.
Could you help me on this In my native language i would speak about the night starting from around 11 pm till 4 in the morning So every time i see an english phrase like 2 o'clock in the morni. I have heard my friend say yesterday evening or yesterday night