It is not grammatically correct to say or write " in the end of July ".
At the end [ of any month ] is the only possibility.
I think this may help you understand it.
When you use the expression "at the end", it needs the preposition "of". In contrast, when you use "in the end", it doesn't need a preposition.
For instance:
At the end of July, we will go to Jamaica to learn some dialects.
At the end of the movie, Mary started weeping.
We were delivering a speech, and Grettel forgot what to say in the end, so we got a bad grade.
The movie was great, yet in the end, it turned a little confusing.
'In July'
eg.We are going to the park in July.....
at the end of july
2012
July 4th I prefer to use this. You can also right it in this way "On the fourth of July" Now it looks more formal:-) (^_^) renmon multiply
They seem to be, yes.
april 1994-july 1994
Highly unlikely. America's Independence Day has nothing to do with the Great Judgement and the end of this world.
Depends what you mean. "At the end of July" would mean "within the last two weeks of July", more or less. And "by the end of July" means "before August 1", which could mean 3 seconds from now, next week, May 1, June17, July 23, etc.
The correct English is July 11th.
No, the correct grammar would be: "July has just started."
at the begining of July
Neither is correct. We say "at the end of August."
The correct sentence is "The credit card was run on July 7th."
Can you end my day with correct grammar
Technically if you were talking you would say July 2nd as in second. Not July two.
The 31st of July is the last day of July.
The correct form is "wit's end", the noun "wit" is singular, possessive. The end of your "wit".
Yes, the possessive form of the noun week is the correct form for 'the end of the week' (the week's end).
He joined us on 26th July