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  1. Yahoo奇摩字典
    KK [ˋwikˋɛnd]

    n.[C] 可數名詞

    • 1. 週末;週末的休假 He works at/on weekends. 他週末工作。
    • 2. (大學等的)週末聚會

    a. 形容詞

    • 1. 週末的;週末用的 My daughter has got a weekend job. 我女兒找到了一份週末的工作。

    vi. 不及物動詞

    • 1. 度週末 We weekended in Paris. 我們在巴黎度週末。

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  2. 1. I would use 'on' because a weekend is two days (or more). 'At' is more particular, for a smaller place or shorter time, whereas on/in are used for longer durations or larger spaces. "Let's eat at an Italian restaurant at 9pm" against "Let's eat in downtown on Friday". Going by this logic, 'on' should be used.

  3. 2018年11月28日 · What's the difference between "at this weekend" and "this weekend" when they are used in a sentence. How do we use them correctly? For example, can I say " I am going to visit my friends at this weekend." OR "I am going to visit my friends this weekend

  4. 2012年11月18日 · Her favorite time of the week is the weekend. The weekend is almost over! That last one could be modified a little, where we wouldn't need the word the: My weekend is almost over! but I still need a word in place of the article, to serve as a qualifier: No weekend is complete without a nap. When I use the plural, though, I don't need a leading ...

  5. 2012年5月7日 · 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 that over the weekend) it just means that by the time the weekend is over it will have happened.

  6. 8. Neither. The answer is “this weekend”, as in “I will see her this weekend.”. Depending on which weekend you mean, you could also say “next weekend”, which is the weekend following “this weekend”. “On the weekend” is sometimes used, but sounds odd to me. “During the weekend” would only be applicable if you were ...

  7. 2015年10月21日 · I will do my work over the weekend. I will do my work during the weekend. Neither "in the weekend" nor "at the weekend" sound correct. "On the weekend" sounds OK, more so if you're talking about multiple weekends. I do my work on weekends.

  8. Weekend day seems perfectly fine to me. It's clear what it means. Holiday would be wrong, because we don't describe normal weekend days as holidays - we reserve that term for particular days of special significance. This is true in both British and American usage (even though other uses of the word holiday differ between the two).

  9. 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.

  10. 2016年7月1日 · Technically "Bye. Have good weekends" is correct in that he is wishing each individual a good weekend, using the collective noun for all of your weekends. However, colloquially this strikes me as lazy grammar. Expansions would be more like: Bye, I hope each

  11. This fits with my feeling as a native speaker, too: in or during for a range of time like a week, month, or season ("in the last week of August"); on for a specific day ("on August tenth"); at for a specific time ("at 4pm"). +1 for not being tempted to say "on" is "incorrect", even though "in" is more common by over 50:1.

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