0
Fatimah0786 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Difference between "There is a wedding on in the Church" and "There is a wedding in the Church"

What is the difference between "There is a wedding on in the Church" and "There is a wedding in the Church"?
Thanks.
  

Top answer

fatimah0786 There is a wedding on in the Church My first impulse would be to think that the wedding was actually in progress at the time this was said. fatimah0786 There is a wedding in the Church My first impulse would be to think that there is a wedding scheduled. )

  • fatimah0786 There is a wedding on in the Church My first impulse would be to think that the wedding was actually in progress at the time this was said.
  • fatimah0786 There is a wedding in the Church My first impulse would be to think that there is a wedding scheduled.
  • )
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
fatimah0786There is a wedding on in the Church
My first impulse would be to think that the wedding was actually in progress at the time this was said.
fatimah0786There is a wedding in the Church
My first impulse would be to think that there is a wedding scheduled. I might ask "When is it going to be?"

CJ

(
0
Thanks for answering. Can we also say, "The deal was initially cancelled, but now it is back on"?
0
fatimah0786Can we also say, "The deal was initially cancelled, but now it is back on"?
Yes, we can say that.

CJ

Related Questions