My wife reads the New York Times each morning.
Yes, it is correct to say "in these times" to refer to the current period or era. It is commonly used to discuss the present day or recent events.
The correct expression is "in times of trouble." This phrase indicates that during periods of difficulty or hardship, certain behaviors or actions are warranted.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be: "I came to your office so many times but I can't find you."
"Ohayougozaimasu" is a Japanese greeting that translates to "good morning" in English. It is a polite and formal way to greet someone in the morning.
Yes, it is correct to say "Tom had interviewed five times before he got his first job" if Tom went through five interview processes before receiving his first job offer.
It opens at 1.30 in the morning and closes at 3.00 in the morning cause i reasearched it yesterday and their the correct times and it's that early because they're scared that vandalists might come and nick stuff
Tories.
Morning Times was created in 1891.
Refers to stocks with a relatively small market capitalization. Market capitalization measures the size of the firm. It is the current share price times outstanding shares. The definition of small cap can vary among brokerages, but generally it is a company with a market capitalization of between $300 million and $2 billion.
Laredo Morning Times was created on 1881-06-14.
The average man reads newspapers 79 times a year.
not grammatically correct, but mathematically correct
Both are correct.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.A proper noun for the common noun newspaper is the name of a newspaper:The Times of IndiaThe Sun (UK)The Wall Street JournalPeople's Daily (China)
214 times
In the King James version the word - morning - appears 227 times and, somewhat related, the word - morrow - appears 102 times
11 times