"What time is our meeting tomorrow?" is acceptable grammar.
You can say "What time is our meeting tomorrow?"
It is more grammatically correct to say "tonight" or "tomorrow" without the preposition "on." So, you would say "I will see you tonight" or "I have a meeting tomorrow."
Both wordings of the question are correct and have almost the same meaning, but asking "what time is the meeting at?" is asking for more exact information than just asking when in the day it is.
The correct verb agreement for collective nouns is determined by whether the collective noun is singular or plural.For example:A flock of geese is landing on the lake.This time of year, flocks of geese are landing on the lake every day.
No, it is not proper English to say "on tomorrow." The correct phrase is "tomorrow."
"Kal milange" is how you say "see you tomorrow" in Punjabi.
Mr Jean has a meeting scheduled for tomorrow.
Yes. This document is for tomorrow's meeting. The meeting belongs to tomorrow.
Yes. This document is for tomorrow's meeting. The meeting belongs to tomorrow.
They should give you a time for the meeting since tomorrow is Friday. You can always double check the time of the meeting with the company. They may of forgot to tell you the time.
meeting
Ask what time; check your calendar; say yes and confirm: "Yes, I will be there at (time) tomorrow."
The cast of Meeting Tomorrow - 1965 includes: Alan Whicker as Himself - Commentator
Quand demain
Both wordings of the question are correct and have almost the same meaning, but asking "what time is the meeting at?" is asking for more exact information than just asking when in the day it is.
guys usually like it fresh and clean..... If they're meeting for the first time tomorrow, give it time to grow back before the relationship develops that far.
The correct verb agreement for collective nouns is determined by whether the collective noun is singular or plural.For example:A flock of geese is landing on the lake.This time of year, flocks of geese are landing on the lake every day.
No, it is not proper English to say "on tomorrow." The correct phrase is "tomorrow."