grammar regarding “see you”





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Time: 2 P.M.



Location: Hilton Hotel



Date: April 7th



Weekday: Sunday





What is the correct grammar?



See you 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel.



See you on Sunday, April 7th, at 2 p.m. at the Hilton Hotel.










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migrated from english.stackexchange.com Apr 7 at 2:29


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  • You missed see you at 2 p.m in the first sentence.

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:14











  • Didn't know "at" was needed. Is that the correct grammar? So it's: See you at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel...? @Jason Bassford

    – user148269
    Apr 7 at 2:17











  • Yes, that's right. It's just the same as in the second sentence (that uses at), but the order of the time and date are reversed. (It's at time, on date, and at place.)

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:26


















0















Time: 2 P.M.



Location: Hilton Hotel



Date: April 7th



Weekday: Sunday





What is the correct grammar?



See you 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel.



See you on Sunday, April 7th, at 2 p.m. at the Hilton Hotel.










share|improve this question













migrated from english.stackexchange.com Apr 7 at 2:29


This question came from our site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts.



















  • You missed see you at 2 p.m in the first sentence.

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:14











  • Didn't know "at" was needed. Is that the correct grammar? So it's: See you at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel...? @Jason Bassford

    – user148269
    Apr 7 at 2:17











  • Yes, that's right. It's just the same as in the second sentence (that uses at), but the order of the time and date are reversed. (It's at time, on date, and at place.)

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:26














0












0








0








Time: 2 P.M.



Location: Hilton Hotel



Date: April 7th



Weekday: Sunday





What is the correct grammar?



See you 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel.



See you on Sunday, April 7th, at 2 p.m. at the Hilton Hotel.










share|improve this question














Time: 2 P.M.



Location: Hilton Hotel



Date: April 7th



Weekday: Sunday





What is the correct grammar?



See you 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel.



See you on Sunday, April 7th, at 2 p.m. at the Hilton Hotel.







grammar






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share|improve this question











share|improve this question




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asked Apr 7 at 2:05









user148269user148269

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migrated from english.stackexchange.com Apr 7 at 2:29


This question came from our site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts.









migrated from english.stackexchange.com Apr 7 at 2:29


This question came from our site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts.















  • You missed see you at 2 p.m in the first sentence.

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:14











  • Didn't know "at" was needed. Is that the correct grammar? So it's: See you at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel...? @Jason Bassford

    – user148269
    Apr 7 at 2:17











  • Yes, that's right. It's just the same as in the second sentence (that uses at), but the order of the time and date are reversed. (It's at time, on date, and at place.)

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:26



















  • You missed see you at 2 p.m in the first sentence.

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:14











  • Didn't know "at" was needed. Is that the correct grammar? So it's: See you at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel...? @Jason Bassford

    – user148269
    Apr 7 at 2:17











  • Yes, that's right. It's just the same as in the second sentence (that uses at), but the order of the time and date are reversed. (It's at time, on date, and at place.)

    – Jason Bassford
    Apr 7 at 2:26

















You missed see you at 2 p.m in the first sentence.

– Jason Bassford
Apr 7 at 2:14





You missed see you at 2 p.m in the first sentence.

– Jason Bassford
Apr 7 at 2:14













Didn't know "at" was needed. Is that the correct grammar? So it's: See you at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel...? @Jason Bassford

– user148269
Apr 7 at 2:17





Didn't know "at" was needed. Is that the correct grammar? So it's: See you at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 7th, at the Hilton Hotel...? @Jason Bassford

– user148269
Apr 7 at 2:17













Yes, that's right. It's just the same as in the second sentence (that uses at), but the order of the time and date are reversed. (It's at time, on date, and at place.)

– Jason Bassford
Apr 7 at 2:26





Yes, that's right. It's just the same as in the second sentence (that uses at), but the order of the time and date are reversed. (It's at time, on date, and at place.)

– Jason Bassford
Apr 7 at 2:26










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