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Chariot Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

the best time of the day or the best time of day

When is the best time of (the) day to exercise? I searched the Internet and found both the phrases. I wonder which is correct. Are both of them correct? If yes, how do they differ? Thanks for your help.
  

Top answer

After "time of" the article is often optional. Another example: This is a very pleasant time of [the] year. CB

  • After "time of" the article is often optional.
  • Another example: This is a very pleasant time of [the] year.
  • CB
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3 Answers
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After "time of" the article is often optional. Another example: This is a very pleasant time of [the] year.

CB
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Thanks for your help, Cool Breeze. Does this rule extend to "month"?
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ChariotDoes this rule extend to "month"?
Why not. I would prefer "at this time of the month", though.

CB

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