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Sivamurugesh Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

posted earlier..'at that moment in time'

0Sir/ Madam,02br
02br
00I am working as a Customer service agent. I would like to understand the usage of the below statements,02br
02br
001. 'at that moment of time'02br
002. 'at that moment in time'02br
00The question to the customer was "01i00Did you enter the correct password 01u00at that moment of time02u02i00?" as in the first instance.02br
00Firstly I'd like to know which one of the two can be used rightly, and how to use them effectively.02br
02br
00Please help me with this as I would like to correct the way I use my English02br
02br
00Thank you 0-
  

Top answer

0 Only 2 is right, and means 01b 00then. 02b 0-

  • 0 Only 2 is right, and means 01b 00then.
  • 02b 0-
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6 Answers
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0 Only 2 is right, and means 01b00then. 02b0-
0
0 00Books 01b00102b00 - 01b001002b00 of 01b0062902b00 on 01b00"at that moment of time"02b00.00 0-
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0Hello Marius, 02br
00If you can be a bit more clear on this, because I was under the impression that at that moment of time is in the past and which means that it has already been completed... or task completed.. am I right to say that 0-
0
0It could be both in the past or in the future, just like01b00 then: 02br
02b
02br
00Past: 01i00Did you, 01b00then/at that moment in time02b00, provide the requested information? 02i02br
01b00"did * at that moment in time"02b02br
05002br
02br
00Future: 01i
0
0Hi,02br
02br
00The simplest thing in almost every case would be just to say 'then', and not bother with these longer phrases.02br
02br
00Best wishes, Clive0-
0
0Marius and Clive, 02br
00I thank you both for helping mw with this one. I will be back with more as I will have to share this information with my team and ask them to correct themselves. 02br
00Thank You once again.02br
00Best regards02br
00Murugesh 0-

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