The morning is not a specific time, it is a period of time. At early morning is wrong (although at dawn works, since dawn is a particular moment). Hello everyone, i was doing some exercises and found the sentence below;
I met him on that cold morning. In the morning on its own just refers to a time of day, but on a {specific} morning relates to the morning of a specific day. Which is better in the following sentence:
1) the accident happened at 5 on the morning of may 10. If it is before lunch, say good morning. If it is after lunch, but before whatever kind of break happens between 4. Different people have different perceptions of what early in the morning is, of course.
I can't find the previous thread on this topic. My friend arrived early in the morning of sunday, the 25th. in its explanation, it is said that the. Which preposition (at or in) should we use before night or morning, when we refer to something done at that time? Do you think that there're any differences in meaning?
I go for a walk in/at the morning. 2) the accident happened at 5 in the morning of may 10. I have english lessons in the morning (mornings) thank you. That's why in the morning, meaning in the period of time defined as morning, is correct.
Either in early morning or in the early morning sounds good to me.