at the weekend or on the weekend?
I’ve noticed that some of you use "at the weekends" and some choose "on the weekends". Is the meaning different when one uses "on the weekend" instead of "at the weekend"? Is there any mistake in using "at" instead of "on" in this phrase or "on" instead of "at"?
Don’t ask me, I really don’t know
You can ask me.
doesn’t matter… weekends are not my happy days anyway
There is no "at the weekend". You can say "on"; it’s better to say "during" or "over" for something that takes place on both Saturday & Sunday.
examples:
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The conference takes place on the weekend of the 19th of October.
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I was drunk during (over, for) the entire weekend.
-k
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surgeon rašė:
…
2. I was drunk during (over, for) the entire weekend.
-k
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Well, make sure you have aspirin next time !
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uh … i didn’t have aspirin last sunday
At the weekend,I think…
Speaking about PLURAL, it’s on weekends - without "the"
But I am not sure about the SINGULAR - I would say "during the weekend"
o as tai sakau ‘savaitgali’ ir viskas aisku. ir nereikia sukt galvos
If I remember correctly, you raised this question yourself. So if you know now, please, tell us all.