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  1. 25 de nov. de 2010 · Just in time means that something happened just before it would haved been too late, e.g. "His arrival was just in time to catch the train before it departed." Just on time refers to an occurrence exactly on schedule, but not earlier or later, e.g. "The train departed just on time at exactly 9:00 AM." H.

  2. 10 de abr. de 2008 · Re: in two weeks/weeks' time/weeks time Thank you for your answers. Funny, in my book (Handbuch des englischen Sprachgebrauchs - it is mainly written in German) it says with a plural construction you can use it with or without the apostroph (examples from the book):

  3. 7 de out. de 2013 · Oct 8, 2013. #9. Wordsmyth said: If we limit the discussion to the meaning of "just" that indicates something happening in the very recent or immediate past, then I would recommend using the present perfect: "I've just started my job".

  4. 4 de dez. de 2011 · "the second time" is the same as "for the second time." "For" is just "omitted." I went to the supermarket for the second time today because I forgot to purchase a bottle of milk. I found the book when I searched my room for the third time. By the way, The meaning of "for the second time" and "two times" is different. I just wanted to let you know.

  5. 7 de mai. de 2013 · We just started having lunch. Come here. Join us. There is a lot of food. Help yourself. b. You're just in time to watch the show. Come here and watch it with me. Meaning intended of " you're just in time ": you arrive when there is available and appropriate time.

  6. 11 de out. de 2014 · According to the grammar we should use Past Simple when we have an exact time expression (yesterday, 2 days ago, etc.) and use Present Perfect if we have expressions like "just", "recently" (or no time expression at all). I don't know what you mean by "the grammar," since English has no organization governing grammar.

  7. 30 de jul. de 2010 · In (B), I am asking what time it is now. I think some native speaker told me that I should say 'the time' instead of 'time' or 'a time', but I'm not quite sure. If you're asking for what time it is now, you use "the time". If you use just "time", the response might be "time for what?"

  8. 4 de fev. de 2015 · Starting the next time and continuing afterwards. For example, if somebody calls me now, I tell that person not to call me after 6 p.m. however many times they call me again. It's just not about the next time but also about the many times after the next that they would call. Will 'from now on' suffice in this context?

  9. 20 de dez. de 2015 · Dec 20, 2015. #2. I agree that "check up on you" in many contexts can mean "investigate." On the other hand, between people who are familiar with it and are mutually friendly it would be okay. "Check on you" without "up" sounds odd to me, but won't say it's wrong. I might say "I just wanted to see if you are okay/see how you are doing" if I ...

  10. 13 de ago. de 2017 · Yes, in "the last time that I saw her", "that" is not a pronoun. It is not the subject ("I" is the subject) or the direct object ("her" is the direct object) or the indirect object ("saw" only allows one object) or the object of any preposition (no preposition is present in the sentence). It plays the same role as "on which" in "the last ...

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