
wishing a happy week - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
As a non-native English speaker, I have a question: Can I write (and say) "Happy week everyone" to wish a good/happy week? Is there any more common English expression in everyday …
phrase usage - Can I say "Have a good week." to somebody I …
If I tell him "Have a good weekend." on a different weekday, that would mean I will not see him again before Friday, or I think that is going to happen. If I say "Have a good week." before …
"Start to the week" vs "Start of the week" [duplicate]
Jan 30, 2023 · I feel that normally one would say "start of the week" in a sentence, but I noticed that sometimes "start to the week" is used, most notably in "Have a great start to the week!".
conversation - Best reply to "Have a nice weekend"? - English …
What do you do if they sent a substantive email and then signed off with "Have a great weekend!" and, in your response, you need to address one of those substantive points and then sign off?
How to wish someone for the upcoming weekend [closed]
3 Having just used/heard this phase for the dozenth time today, I can attest that the common American phrase is "Have a good weekend" (good, great, etc, depending on what exactly you …
differences - "Have good weekends" vs "Have a good weekend"
Jul 1, 2016 · Have good weekends" is correct in that he is wishing each individual a good weekend, using the collective noun for all of your weekends. However, colloquially this strikes …
Start to/of the day - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Apr 14, 2018 · Grammatically, "a perfect start of the day" makes sense. And without the word "perfect", it would usually be the best choice, as in "at the start of the day". But there is an …
Holidays or holiday? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Oct 28, 2021 · To express that you would say something like, Have a great vacation. If no actual Holiday occurred during that week, saying Happy Holiday would sound odd.
word usage - Happy Holidays or Happy Holiday? - English …
May 30, 2013 · In British English, "Happy Holidays!" would be understood, but is not idiomatic, and comes across as an Americanism: British English speakers would more likely say …
When can you start wishing people a good weekend? [closed]
On hearing 'have a good weekend', depending on the time/day, it definitely means to me (US) that it is near the weekend and you don't expect to communicate again before then.