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Zora
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- "In" is not used that often - at least I have never heard it before but if George says it exist then it must!
And "at" and "on" are interchangeable in the "at/on the weekend" example it �s just that:
AT - is more British ON - is more American
And that is basically the difference!
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19 Feb 2009
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cheezels
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Still checking IN (edit :I originally wrote ON GOOD GRIEF MY BRAIN HAS EXPLODED!!!!) George... The examples are all things that I might say in conversation informally.... For
example I might say to a friend.. Hey, what are we doing in the
weekend?... I never realised it wasn �t "proper english".... hmmmm
At least I can say next week that it is a Americal British thing.... eeeeek!!!!!!! mwhahaha...
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19 Feb 2009
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Zora
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Checking Georgette... bb soon
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19 Feb 2009
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Zora
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Okay dokey... in the Prepositions of time
part page 72 - in my book, (part 81) "in the weekend" doesn �t seem to
exist. Although, you can say "in time" "in good time"... but not "in
the weekend"...
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19 Feb 2009
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Amanda W
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Well Cheezel, as a native from Britain I can only say we use at the weekend. I think the Americans say on but I �ve never heard of in... sorry.
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19 Feb 2009
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libertybelle
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Why don �t you just say What are you doing this weekend and be done with it!!!
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19 Feb 2009
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magherinis
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At the weekend . That �s what grammar books say |
19 Feb 2009
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libertybelle
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I seen a cat? Sheesssssssh Zora - you are such an oakie!!! You also say " Them thar hills?" 
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19 Feb 2009
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