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Usenet Posted 19 years ago
Usage

How to put "one day" and "morning" together

Hi,
I wonder if there is a proper way to combine one day and morning together, when describing an event. Or I can simply use "one day morning." Thanks in advance.
Gloria
  

Top answer

[nq:1]Hi, I wonder if there is a proper way to combine one day and morning together, when describing an event. [/nq] No, you can't, but I can't figure out what you want to say, so I can't give you any more hellp. [nq:1]Gloria[/nq] If you are inclined to email me for some reason, remove NOPSAM :-)

  • [nq:1]Hi, I wonder if there is a proper way to combine one day and morning together, when describing an event.
  • [/nq] No, you can't, but I can't figure out what you want to say, so I can't give you any more hellp.
  • [nq:1]Gloria[/nq] If you are inclined to email me for some reason, remove NOPSAM :-)
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5 Answers
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[nq:1]Hi, I wonder if there is a proper way to combine one day and morning together, when describing an event. Or I can simply use "one day morning." Thanks in advance.[/nq]
No, you can't, but I can't figure out what you want to say, so I can't give you any more hellp.
[nq:1]Gloria[/nq]
If you are inclined to email me
for some reason, remove NOPSAM :-)
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[nq:1]Hi, I wonder if there is a proper way to combine one day and morning together, when describing an event. Or I can simply use "one day morning." Thanks in advance.[/nq]
That isn't idiomatic. Try "One day, in the morning" or "In the morning, one day." Usually there's a way to rewrite the context so that you don't need "one day" at all.
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[nq:2]Hi, I wonder if there is a proper way to ... I can simply use "one day morning." Thanks in advance.[/nq]
[nq:1]That isn't idiomatic. Try "One day, in the morning" or "In the morning, one day." Usually there's a way to rewrite the context so that you don't need "one day" at all.[/nq]
You could say "one morning"
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[nq:2]That isn't idiomatic. Try "One day, in the morning" or ... context so that you don't need "one day" at all.[/nq]
[nq:1]You could say "one morning"[/nq]
Nah. Too easy.
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[nq:1]Hi, I wonder if there is a proper way to combine one day and morning together, when describing an event. Or I can simply use "one day morning." Thanks in advance. Gloria[/nq]
It depends on exactly what youu mean.
If the event takes place only during the morning hours of one particular day, it would be clearest to use the name of the day or the date: Tuesday morning, the morning of Au

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