Either of those is a possibility. if you have a savings account that accrues interest, you may get a deposit "in every month" because one shows up in January, one in February, and so forth. But you also are getting "on every month" since the bank is paying you on the basis that the money was in the account for a particular 30-day period.
No, "pre-planned since a month" is not grammatically correct. It would be more accurate to say "pre-planned for a month" or "planned in advance for a month."
Yes, that statement is correct as a way to indicate the passage of one month since the letter was posted.
Yes, it is correct to say "in every tooth" when referring to something that occurs or exists within each individual tooth.
It is correct to say "in March" when referring to the month as a whole. For example, "My birthday is in March." However, you would say "on March" when referring to a specific date within the month. For example, "The concert is on March 15th."
It would be more correct to say, 'I wish the month of November ended really fast.' November has 30 days.
You dont say?
That is correct. You could also say: Tom has been unemployed for a month.
Either one is correct grammar. Both are grammatically correct. But when you say 'the bill can be paid ...' there is some sort of uncertainty, whereas in 'the bill will be paid ...' there is compulsion or certainty about the payment.
yes
No, "pre-planned since a month" is not grammatically correct. It would be more accurate to say "pre-planned for a month" or "planned in advance for a month."
Either may be correct depending on context. If you are merely specifying the month then it would be correct to say your birthday is in that month. Being more specific you would say your birthday is on a specific date.
yes notice belongs to month so apostrophy s
Yes, that statement is correct as a way to indicate the passage of one month since the letter was posted.
Yes, it is correct to say "in every tooth" when referring to something that occurs or exists within each individual tooth.
It is correct to say "in March" when referring to the month as a whole. For example, "My birthday is in March." However, you would say "on March" when referring to a specific date within the month. For example, "The concert is on March 15th."
It would be more correct to say, 'I wish the month of November ended really fast.' November has 30 days.
No. It would be better to say: every week on Friday the Friday of every week the week beginning every Friday