since yesterday afternoon is correct.
since + the point-in-time ;
for + time range.
Normally this is not written or spoken English but it can be colloquially used.
"Where were you", is the correct usage if you are asking someone where they were last night. The answer could be "I was..."The second person pronoun "you" always uses the past tense "were."
This is how you use yesterday in a sentence I went to the carnival yesterday afternoon
The correct version is "I saw her yesterday."
"Thank you for delivering it to me yesterday"
"Yesterday afternoon" is the correct phrase to use. The word "yesterday" refers to a specific day in the past, while "last afternoon" might suggest a more general reference to the previous afternoon.
Normally this is not written or spoken English but it can be colloquially used.
no
That depends on the meaning and the context. Correct: * It was our last afternoon together before the end of the vacation. * Yesterday afternoon I talked to them about the problem. * There is no issue with the first sentence above. I believe we are discussing "last afternoon" in the context of a sentence like the second one above.* in that context, if we are talking today, before 12 noon, of an event that occurred yesterday in the afternoon, we say "last afternoon" because the event occurred during the "last" afternoon. However if we are talking today in the evening or in the night of the same event, we cannot say last "afternoon" because there has been another afternoon that has passed since that event occurred. In such a case we must say "yesterday afternoon". The same rule should apply for "last morning" and "yesterday morning".
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
"Where were you", is the correct usage if you are asking someone where they were last night. The answer could be "I was..."The second person pronoun "you" always uses the past tense "were."
This is how you use yesterday in a sentence I went to the carnival yesterday afternoon
yesterday afternoon
The correct version is "I saw her yesterday."
"Thank you for delivering it to me yesterday"
No, the correct sentence is "I did not go yesterday." The verb "go" should be in its base form after "did not."
It was scorching hot yesterday afternoon.