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Hans51 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

"Nowadays is a peak season."

1) "Today is your birthday."
2) "Nowadays is a peak season."

Today can be a subject and then how about nowadays? In my language system, the sentence is natural but I have never seen it, so what do you native English speakers think?

Thank you so much as always and have a good day.
  

Top answer

In my opinion in cannot because I have generally only seen "nowadays" as an adverb meaning at the present time. " There is little demand for typewriters nowadays (anymore). Nowadays (presently) people do most of their typing on their computers or phones.

  • In my opinion in cannot because I have generally only seen "nowadays" as an adverb meaning at the present time.
  • " There is little demand for typewriters nowadays (anymore).
  • Nowadays (presently) people do most of their typing on their computers or phones.
  • Today can be an adverb and can be used similarly to the above nowadays examples.
  • However, today can also be a noun which is the form it takes when it functions as a subject.
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1 Answers
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In my opinion in cannot because I have generally only seen "nowadays" as an adverb meaning at the present time. It functions like the words "presently" or "anymore."

There is little demand for typewriters nowadays (anymore).
Nowadays (presently) people do most of their typing on their computers or phones.

Today can be an adverb and can be used similarly to the

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