What is the difference of “It is September” and “It is in September”?
What is the difference between these two sentences:
It is September.
It is in September.
There seems a difference, but I don't know it.
When to use the one over the other?
grammar prepositions time
add a comment |
What is the difference between these two sentences:
It is September.
It is in September.
There seems a difference, but I don't know it.
When to use the one over the other?
grammar prepositions time
Could you tell us what you're trying to say?
– userr2684291
2 hours ago
@userr2684291 Sorry, it is from Duolingo French course but French clearly tells them apart, and the course creators explain it relating to these English. But I don't understand the difference, so came here to ask.
– Blaszard
2 hours ago
add a comment |
What is the difference between these two sentences:
It is September.
It is in September.
There seems a difference, but I don't know it.
When to use the one over the other?
grammar prepositions time
What is the difference between these two sentences:
It is September.
It is in September.
There seems a difference, but I don't know it.
When to use the one over the other?
grammar prepositions time
grammar prepositions time
asked 3 hours ago
Blaszard
2514517
2514517
Could you tell us what you're trying to say?
– userr2684291
2 hours ago
@userr2684291 Sorry, it is from Duolingo French course but French clearly tells them apart, and the course creators explain it relating to these English. But I don't understand the difference, so came here to ask.
– Blaszard
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Could you tell us what you're trying to say?
– userr2684291
2 hours ago
@userr2684291 Sorry, it is from Duolingo French course but French clearly tells them apart, and the course creators explain it relating to these English. But I don't understand the difference, so came here to ask.
– Blaszard
2 hours ago
Could you tell us what you're trying to say?
– userr2684291
2 hours ago
Could you tell us what you're trying to say?
– userr2684291
2 hours ago
@userr2684291 Sorry, it is from Duolingo French course but French clearly tells them apart, and the course creators explain it relating to these English. But I don't understand the difference, so came here to ask.
– Blaszard
2 hours ago
@userr2684291 Sorry, it is from Duolingo French course but French clearly tells them apart, and the course creators explain it relating to these English. But I don't understand the difference, so came here to ask.
– Blaszard
2 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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oldest
votes
Generally speaking, the following is how you would interpret the two sentences.
It is September.
This means that the current month is September.
It is in September.
Purely on its own, this sentence is awkward and unidiomatic. If we mean to say that the current month is September, we never say it is in September.
However, the sentence makes sense if the pronoun is referring to some kind of event:
"When is the wedding?"
"It is (scheduled to be) in September."
Note that there are some alternatives to a standalone sentence about it being September—one even uses in and doesn't refer to an event:
It is now September.
We find ourselves in September.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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Generally speaking, the following is how you would interpret the two sentences.
It is September.
This means that the current month is September.
It is in September.
Purely on its own, this sentence is awkward and unidiomatic. If we mean to say that the current month is September, we never say it is in September.
However, the sentence makes sense if the pronoun is referring to some kind of event:
"When is the wedding?"
"It is (scheduled to be) in September."
Note that there are some alternatives to a standalone sentence about it being September—one even uses in and doesn't refer to an event:
It is now September.
We find ourselves in September.
add a comment |
Generally speaking, the following is how you would interpret the two sentences.
It is September.
This means that the current month is September.
It is in September.
Purely on its own, this sentence is awkward and unidiomatic. If we mean to say that the current month is September, we never say it is in September.
However, the sentence makes sense if the pronoun is referring to some kind of event:
"When is the wedding?"
"It is (scheduled to be) in September."
Note that there are some alternatives to a standalone sentence about it being September—one even uses in and doesn't refer to an event:
It is now September.
We find ourselves in September.
add a comment |
Generally speaking, the following is how you would interpret the two sentences.
It is September.
This means that the current month is September.
It is in September.
Purely on its own, this sentence is awkward and unidiomatic. If we mean to say that the current month is September, we never say it is in September.
However, the sentence makes sense if the pronoun is referring to some kind of event:
"When is the wedding?"
"It is (scheduled to be) in September."
Note that there are some alternatives to a standalone sentence about it being September—one even uses in and doesn't refer to an event:
It is now September.
We find ourselves in September.
Generally speaking, the following is how you would interpret the two sentences.
It is September.
This means that the current month is September.
It is in September.
Purely on its own, this sentence is awkward and unidiomatic. If we mean to say that the current month is September, we never say it is in September.
However, the sentence makes sense if the pronoun is referring to some kind of event:
"When is the wedding?"
"It is (scheduled to be) in September."
Note that there are some alternatives to a standalone sentence about it being September—one even uses in and doesn't refer to an event:
It is now September.
We find ourselves in September.
answered 1 hour ago
Jason Bassford
12.2k22033
12.2k22033
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Could you tell us what you're trying to say?
– userr2684291
2 hours ago
@userr2684291 Sorry, it is from Duolingo French course but French clearly tells them apart, and the course creators explain it relating to these English. But I don't understand the difference, so came here to ask.
– Blaszard
2 hours ago