Saturday + Sunday = the weekend
Weekend is written as ONE word.
You do NOT write it as two words (week end - incorrect) or with a dash/hyphen (week-end - incorrect)
Complete this sentence…
Do we say AT the weekend or ON the weekend?
What is the difference?
AT the weekend is used in British English
ON the weekend is used in American English
Both prepositions can be used in this sentence. It depends on where you are speaking or using English.
Note: We do NOT say in the weekend.
More example sentences: (Think about when the sentence would be used… in British or American English)
On Fridays after work or school, you may hear people say “Finally, it’s the weekend!” even though it is not Saturday yet.
We do not use prepositions before LAST or NEXT.
Here we are specifying that it was the weekend that just went by or the weekend that is coming up.
Both last and next can be replaced by at the/on the and retain the same meaning.
We also do not use prepositions before each, every, this, that + weekend.
We don’t say all the weekends, we say every weekend.
Remember, after EVERY we have a singular noun (= every + singular noun) so we don’t say every weekends (incorrect)
Sometimes you will hear people say over the weekend or during the weekend
In general: over the weekend = during the weekend = at/on the weekend
It can refer to the entire duration of the weekend
Or it can refer to something that happens at a single point but at some time within the duration of the weekend. It is not necessarily on both days.
A long weekend is a weekend that has at least three days due to a public holiday falling on either the Friday or Monday.
Friday is a public holiday so the Friday, Saturday and Sunday is a long weekend.
Weekend is mostly used in singular form. However it can be used in its plural form (weekends) when we are referring to a number of different weekends over a period of time.
One final thing, we don’t write weekend with a hyphen in the middle.
What do you normally do on the weekend?
Link nội dung: https://study-japan.edu.vn/at-the-weekend-or-on-the-weekend-a12299.html