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weekend    音标拼音: [w'ik,ɛnd] [w'ik,ɪnd]
n. 周末,周末休假

周末,周末休假

weekend
n 1: a time period usually extending from Friday night through
Sunday; more loosely defined as any period of successive
days including one and only one Sunday
v 1: spend the weekend

Week-end \Week"-end"\, n.
The end of the week, usually comprising the period from
Friday evening to Monday morning, observed commonly as a
period of respite from work or school; as, to visit one for a
week-end; also, a house party during a week-end. Contrasted
to {work days}.

Note: Where work days continue throught Saturday morning, the
weekend starts on Saturday at noon.
[Webster 1913 Suppl. PJC]

37 Moby Thesaurus words for "weekend":
Christmas, Sunday, buy time, consume time, furlough,
go on furlough, go on leave, holiday, keep time, kill time, leave,
leave of absence, liberty, look for time, make holiday,
measure time, occupy time, paid holiday, paid vacation, pass time,
put in time, race against time, sabbatical, sabbatical leave,
sabbatical year, shore leave, spend time, summer, take a holiday,
take leave, take time, take up time, time off, use time, vacation,
winter, work against time



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  • At on (the) weekend (s) - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    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
  • Weekend vs weekends - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    @FumbleFingers But if the boss says he needs it by Monday morning, you might say "It's ok, I'll do it at the weekend" (Or you could say "I'll do it over the weekend ) An American would in all likelihood say "Ok, I'll do it on the weekend" "I work weekends" is used in a different context - I would suggest –
  • This weekend vs Next weekend [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    Following this definition, "next weekend" will always mean the weekend with the start date in closes proximity in time If the phrase is used during a weekend, of course, you'd be referring to the weekend following the one you are currently experiencing However, the issue gets more complicated if you look to other definitions
  • using phrase weekend of - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    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
  • word choice - On the weekend or during the weekend - English . . .
    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)
  • On at for over the weekend in American English
    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
  • Different ways to say you are leaving work for the day
    Formal ways: I'm done for the day See you tomorrow (or on Monday, for e g)! Let me call it a day! Good evening (or night, depending on time)!|
  • verbs - Whats the difference between I look forward to and Im . . .
    Others have suggested this is wrong because the Present Progressive Tense is used for something you are doing right now, at the same time you are speaking writing, and the Present Tense can be used for things you do habitually
  • Is it “in” or “on the holidays”? - English Language Usage . . .
    On is used in the following: on the weekend (AmEng), on Christmas day and on Easter Sunday The preposition on is normally used for dates (i e on 25th December) and days of the week In British English, people ‘go on holiday’ but in American English they ‘go on vacation’
  • Hope you have had a good weekend - WordReference Forums
    You see the co-worker on her first day back to work and you are curious about her trip to the beach You might then say I hope you had a good weekend In return, she might say "yes, the weather was beautiful and I had a wonderful weekend" or "Unfortunately, I was sick in bed the whole time, and so I did not have a good weekend "





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