13.1 Transcript
13.1 Transcript
13.1 Transcript
[00:00:05] We most often use at to refer to a specific time, an exact hour of the day. Usually a
time that you can read on a clock.
[00:00:25] At is also used to talk about the general period of time that surrounds the specific
date of a holiday.
[00:00:31] So for example, Christmas is on December 25th. That is the specific date we celebrate
this holiday. But if we say at Christmas, we are describing the period of time that we begin to
celebrate it and finish celebrating it. So at Christmas can mean from the end of November until
the end of December. You will also hear some people add -time to the end of a holiday name to
express the idea of the entire amount of time that the holiday is celebrated, like Christmastime.
[00:01:03] At Christmas, we cut down a tree, visit family and sing a lot of Christmas songs.
[00:01:08] Remember this doesn't mean just the day of Christmas. It means the things we do
before it and after it.
[00:01:14] At Halloween people watch scary movies and decorate their houses. Then, on the day
of Halloween, the kids go trick-or-treating.
[00:01:22] On.
[00:01:23] I just showed you how we can use at to describe a period of time that surrounds a
specific date. Now, I'll show you how to use on for specific days and dates on the calendar.
[00:01:35] Days.
[00:01:35] When I say days, I mean Monday Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
and Sunday.
[00:01:41] These are the days of the week. And when we want to talk about a specific day, we
use on!
[00:01:57] Dates.
[00:01:58] A date on the calendar is a specific day of the month, and we use on when discussing
one. So that can be the ordinal number, like the third, the 21st or the 30th. Or we can also
include the month and we have a couple ways to do that. For example, the 3rd of March or the
21st of March, the 30th of March or, and much more common in the US, we can put the month
first, followed by the ordinal number. March 3rd, March 21st, March 30th.
[00:02:50] If you're ever talking about a month or a year, and it's related to time, you are going
to use in. We always use in with months and years. And we talk about months and years a lot.
So that is important to remember. This is for specific years and months and we'll discuss how to
use in for more general periods in a little bit.
[00:03:12] The first time I heard this band was in like 2014.
[00:03:16] I graduated from college in 2007, and I started working here in March.
[00:03:24] A group of ten years is called a decade in English. A group of 100 years is a century.
The 1980s and 1920s are two different decades, far apart in the same century. Notice that to say
a decade in time, we say the plus the specific decade. Like this the 30s the 40's the 50s. You can
also say it the longer way: the 1930s the 1940s the 1950s. The 20th century is every decade
from the 1900s to the 1990s. For a century, we say the century. The 19th century, the 20th
century, and now the 21st century .And guess what, we use in with all of these!
[00:04:12] World War II started in the first half of the 20th century.
[00:04:29] There are four seasons in a year: fall winter spring and summer. In the UK autumn is
used instead of fall. In the US. fall is much more common, but we sometimes use autumn. And
whenever talking about one of these seasons related to time, we'll use in.
[00:04:56] If you want to say when something is going to happen in the future, or make a
prediction or estimate about something in the future, use in.