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  2. syntactic analysis - "early in the morning" and " in the early...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/369741/early-in-the...

    However, in (2), the relevant string is early in the morning where early is acting as a temporal adverbial modifying the temporal phrase in the morning. What does this mean, though, in more concrete terms? If, for instance, you consider early morning to be the time between 5 am and 7 am. Under the reading offered in (1), where you are to drink ...

  3. differences - early this morning vs earlier this morning -...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/250390

    The difference is a bit more outspoken if you substitute week for morning: "Early this week" (or last week, or next week!) means probably Monday or Tuseday. "Earlier this week" means somewhere in the current week, before now. So if today is Saturday, "earlier this week" could be Thursday. Share. Improve this answer.

  4. Is there a term for the period between midnight and sunrise?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/69815

    @Mitch On a related note, the OED entry for “small hours” gives “the early hours after midnight denoted by the small numbers, one, two, etc.” Interestingly, the 1st citation is from Charles Dickens in 1836: “He invited friends home, who used to come at ten o'clock, and begin to get happy about the small hours.” The 2nd citation ...

  5. What's the difference between "early in the morning", in the...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/545305

    In the morning = before noon. Early in the morning = in the first hours of the time that most people are up and about. At night = during the hours of darkness, or when most people are in bed. Late at night = in the latter part of the evening, when some people are probably already in bed.

  6. Morning refers to any time before noon, so 1am is still the morning. Very early morning is sometimes known as "the small hours" (or any regional variant of those words). The actual time is variable, although you will probably provoke a laugh from working people if you refer to any time after 7am in that way (and probably any time after 6am).

  7. Late Night vs Early Morning [duplicate] - English Language &...

    english.stackexchange.com/.../late-night-vs-early-morning

    An early morning would be waking up before 06:00, a late night would be going home after 06:00. (a late night usually means you have been out with your friends enjoying yourself - rather than simply going to bed later than is normal) It's easier when you live on the Equator, 12 hours of light, 12 hours of dark. Share.

  8. It also frequently refers to a morning bowel movement. Its a euphemism for a bowel movement. (From a time when using the bathroom meant going for a walk to the outhouse--the original meaning was still "going for a walk", but this idea was used in the euphemism for going to the bathroom.)

  9. Why is "today morning" wrong but "tomorrow morning" right?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/147544/why-is-today...

    This morning I have an appointment. = On this specific morning, I have an appointment Whereas, "Today I have an appointment" can, theoretically, mean any time from dawn until midnight. This 1. Being just mentioned or present in space, time, or thought: She left early this morning.

  10. Origin of 'wee hours' - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/368546/origin-of-wee-hours

    Wee hours the early hours of the morning after midnight. (Oxford Dictionary of English) I also looked at Merriam, the Free Dictionary and Wiktionary. None offer a etymology of the phrase. The Times of India claim to, but don't : Wee hours mean the early hours of a day, or the period immediately after midnight.

  11. single word requests - Time of day between morning and noon -...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/534503

    the early hours of the morning (the early hours): between midnight and 7.00 a.m. when the sun rises. early-morning (early): between about 7.00 and 9.00 a.m. mid-morning: between about 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. (the midpoint between sunrise and noon). n.b. noon is twelve o'clock in the middle of the day; a precise time, not a period of time.