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  2. sentence structure - "....in 10 days" or ".....after 10 days ...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/302595/in-10-days-or-after-10-days

    So "after ten days" means that it will be reassessed on 2nd December (ten days after the lockdown starts), whereas "in ten days" would have meant on 30th November (ten days from the time of writing). The latter would also be poor reporting - you don't know exactly when the article will be read, so the best way to express "ten days from the time ...

  3. Is the word "decadally" correct? - English Language Learners...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/113268/is-the-word-decadally-correct

    Also remember that you want to use a common phrase that everyone will immediately recognize, so "every 10 days" is your best bet. But that doesn't apply to all time periods. For fun here is a list of the names of various lengths of time , although it doesn't include compound terms like "bi-weekly" or "every other year", and a few others like ...

  4. 3. "Of" works if the event is ongoing. If the conference were fifteen days long, you could say that "ten days have passed of the conference" meaning that five of them are still remaining. It's not exactly the construction you quote, but you can use "to" before the event: "It was still ten days to the conference" but "until" works better there.

  5. sentence construction - "from ten days ahead" in this context -...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/230322/from-ten-days-ahead-in-this-context

    . . . ten days ahead of the first performance. 'From' is not needed. More than one rehearsal IS! You should start rehearsals ten days before the first performance of the play. Or. The play will need ten days' rehearsals. But 'We will be rehearsing from Jan 5th.' You should turn the indicators on one mile before the hospital.

  6. The phrase "It was only ten years ago" isn't an event; and. the structure X since/after Y requires X to be a duration (e.g. ten years). The phrase ten years ago is a specific point in time, not a duration.

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  8. has/have - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/43607/time-expression-has-have

    A ten years has passed that I will never forget. Again, ten years is considered singular and so I can use a singular verb, and I can use the indefinite article before the singular 'ten years'. The question seems to be about the following: An arduous ten years have passed. We know that with "arduous" we can say: An arduous ten years has passed.

  9. That is reliable authority. "Five consecutive days" and "five straight days" have the same denotative meaning. "She stayed at that hotel for five consecutive days" and "she stayed at that hotel for five straight days" denote the same thing, and neither implies that she never left the hotel's premises throughout those five days.

  10. What is the difference between "within five to six days" and...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/349361/what-is-the-difference-between-within...

    "Within 6 days" implies that the symptoms could begin at any point before the 6th day - on day 1, day 2, day 3 etc "Within 5-6 days" is a more specific time frame using two points of reference. It means that the symptoms will most likely occur on day 5 or 6 following infection.

  11. 6. This should be written with a possessive. Consider the case "It's around one day's worth of stuff". That is clearly correct and the singular possessive can be used. "One day worth" would be wrong. Therefore in the plural case, the plural possessive should be used: Three days' worth. However, this is one of those punctuation rules that are ...