It is today's meeting.
You say "meeting at" when referring to a specific location where the meeting will take place. For example, "Let's meet at the coffee shop." On the other hand, "meeting in" is used to describe the context or duration of the meeting, such as "We'll have a meeting in the morning."
"We are meeting on September 23rd."
"What time is our meeting tomorrow?" is acceptable grammar.
"Minutes of the meeting were" is the correct phrase to use. "Minutes" in this context refers to a record of what was discussed or decided upon during a meeting, which is considered a plural noun requiring the plural verb "were."
Yes, it is correct to say "I will be present during the meeting next week." This conveys your intention to attend the meeting and be physically there.
The word todays is the plural form for the noun today. Example sentence: All of our todays are now yesterdays. The possessive form is today's. Example sentences: Today's plan is for lunch and a movie. Today's date is the twentieth.
today is monday, January 10, 2009 or monday
The word today is a possessive in the noun phrase "today's meeting" (meeting happening today). The word today is an adverb in the verb phrase "meeting today" (occurring today). The latter is unusual but not unseen in sentences such as "The President will be today meeting with his Cabinet" instead of "The President will be meeting with his Cabinet today" especially if there is a longer object such as "meeting the most vocal critics of his plan to end the ongoing crisis" where the "today" could be too far from the verb modified. More typically, the "today" is used to start the sentence.
Todays Goverment the United States if America we all have a say in the goverment
lorsque nous sommes réunis aujourd'hui
Today !!
Today
today
todays date
todays date
todays date
It depends on whether this is a direct question or indirect (reported) speech. The word order is different for a direct question: "What time are you meeting today?" If you are using indirect speech, however, the original word order is correct: "Please let Corinne know what time you are meeting today."