0
Liton Das Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Talking about dusk, dawn, sunrise, evening, morning, sunset.

Please teach me to speak about these times (dusk, dawn, sunrise, evening, morning, sunset).

I am trying, please correct me if I make a mistake also state atleast one or two ways to describe them.


DUSK - we need to hurry up it's dusking (getting darker).

DAWN - it's dawning, morning will start after the dawn breaks.

Sunrise - The Sun rises in the east.

Evening - The evening starts when the sun sets.

Morning - the usual time when morning start at is 6 am.

Sunset - The Sun set in the west.

  

Top answer

Have you tried to look up those words in the dictionary? Take a look at the link below. You'll get plenty of example sentence using those words.

  • Have you tried to look up those words in the dictionary?
  • Take a look at the link below.
  • You'll get plenty of example sentence using those words.
  • com Liton Das Sunrise - The s un rises in the east.
  • Liton Das Evening - The evening starts when the sun sets.
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.

2 Answers
0

Have you tried to look up those words in the dictionary? Take a look at the link below. You'll get plenty of example sentence using those words.

www.onelook.com

Liton DasSunrise - The sun rises in the east.
Liton DasEvening - The evening starts when the sun sets.
0

American answer:

Liton DasDUSK - we need to hurry up it's dusking (getting darker).

That use of the verb "dusk" is technically correct, but nobody would ever put it that way outside of poetry. "Getting dark", not "darker", is usual. There is also "twilight", but that is tricky to use naturally. The deer and fireflies come out around twilight.

Related Questions