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PreciousJones Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

at/in

I will see you at the beginning of January. Or

I will see you in the beginning of January.

Are both useable?

Thanks.
  

Top answer

PreciousJones Are both useable? No, only in .

  • PreciousJones Are both useable?
  • No, only in .
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3 Answers
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PreciousJonesAre both useable?
No, only in.
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Aspara Gus PreciousJonesAre both useable?No, only in.
When do we use at?

At the beginning of the movie. Or

In the beginning of the movie.
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Forget what I said. It would appear that at the beginning [of something] is actually in common use. In fact, it might even be generally preferred to in, which for some reason sounds like the only natural choice to me, hence my hasty reply. Consider them interchangeable in your examples.

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