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Addyaddy Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

as of /on date

When I want to refer to the progress of a plan, Do I use "as on <date>", or do I use " as of <date>"?
  

Top answer

I have never seen 'as on' used reputably. 'As at ' is an alternative to 'as of', but both are rather stilted, when one can usually just use 'on': As at March 31st, my sentence will be finished. As of March 31st, my sentence will be finished.

  • I have never seen 'as on' used reputably.
  • 'As at ' is an alternative to 'as of', but both are rather stilted, when one can usually just use 'on': As at March 31st, my sentence will be finished.
  • As of March 31st, my sentence will be finished.
  • On March 31st, my sentence will be finished.
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1 Answers
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I have never seen 'as on' used reputably. 'As at' is an alternative to 'as of', but both are rather stilted, when one can usually just use 'on':

As at March 31st, my sentence will be finished.
As of March 31st, my sentence will be finished.
On March 31st, my sentence will be finished.

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