0
Vincent Teo Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

On Sunday / on Sundays

Do we say,

(a) He is rollerblading on Sundays / on / every Sunday.

(b) He likes rollerblading on Sundays / on / every Sunday.

(c) He goes rollerblading on Sundays / on / every Sunday.
  

Top answer

Hi He rollerblades on Sundays He rollerblades every Sunday He likes rollerblading on Sundays He like rollerblading every Sunday He goes rollerblading on Sundays He goes rollerblading every Sunday

  • Hi He rollerblades on Sundays He rollerblades every Sunday He likes rollerblading on Sundays He like rollerblading every Sunday He goes rollerblading on Sundays He goes rollerblading every Sunday
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.

5 Answers
0
Hi

He rollerblades on Sundays
He rollerblades every Sunday

He likes rollerblading on Sundays
He like rollerblading every Sunday

He goes rollerblading on Sundays
He goes rollerblading every Sunday
0
Thanks. If I say,

He is rollerbalding on Sunday.
0
Hi

He is (going) rollerblading on Sunday = he will take part in this activity next Sunday. It does not tell us if he will repeat it.
0
Can I say,

He was rollerblading around the park last Sunday.

P/s: If I want to mention that, "He is doing the action", so do I say, " He is rollerblading..."? Not going to do the action in the future.
0
He was rollerblading around the park last Sunday. - OK

He is rollerblading now.

He is rollerblading on Sunday = He is going rollerblading on Sunday.

Related Questions