<b>at</b> the weekend or <b>on</b> the weekend?

at the weekend or on the weekend?

I’ve noticed that some of you use &quot;at the weekends&quot; and some choose &quot;on the weekends&quot;. Is the meaning different when one uses &quot;on the weekend&quot; instead of &quot;at the weekend&quot;? Is there any mistake in using &quot;at&quot; instead of &quot;on&quot; in this phrase or &quot;on&quot; instead of &quot;at&quot;?

Don’t ask me, I really don’t know Cha cha

You can ask me.Šypsena

doesn’t matter… weekends are not my happy days anyway Šypsena

There is no &quot;at the weekend&quot;. You can say &quot;on&quot;; it’s better to say &quot;during&quot; or &quot;over&quot; for something that takes place on both Saturday & Sunday.

examples:

  1. The conference takes place on the weekend of the 19th of October.

  2. I was drunk during (over, for) the entire weekend.

-k Taurė

[quote]
surgeon rašė:

2. I was drunk during (over, for) the entire weekend.
-k Taurė
[/quote]

Well, make sure you have aspirin Dovana next time Taurė! Cha cha

Well, make sure you have aspirin Dovana next time Taurė! Cha cha

[/quote]

uh … i didn’t have aspirin last sunday Liūdna

At the weekend,I think…

Speaking about PLURAL, it’s on weekends - without &quot;the&quot;

But I am not sure about the SINGULAR - I would say &quot;during the weekend&quot; Aš nekaltas

o as tai sakau ‘savaitgali’ ir viskas aisku. ir nereikia sukt galvos Cha chaCha chaCha cha

If I remember correctly, you raised this question yourself. So if you know now, please, tell us all.