ChatterBank0 min ago
What is the difference ?
1. I do it on a Sunday.
2. I do it on Sunday.
I am Polish and cannot understand the difference.
Thanx
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by bartholomew. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would say that Grunty is right.
1. "I do it on a Sunday" could be an answer to a question like "On which day do you usually clean your car?"
2. Well, the above hypothetical question could also be answered "I do it on Sundays" (which means, "I am in the habit of doing it on Sundays" or "I usually do it on Sundays"). "I do it on Sunday", if meant in the context described by Grunty under his suggestion 2 should, of course, read "I WILL do it on Sunday".
The difference is very subtle and nothing you should worry yourself about! :-)
I'm getting my oar in again!
acw was right in saying "I will do it Sunday" if that is the Sunday coming up, i.e. the next one. (although that would be more commonly shortened to "I'll do it Sunday").
Also "I do it on a Sunday" is correct although that is a colloquial expression - using the indefinite article 'a' to denote a plural, still meaning that a person does something every Sunday.
"I do it on Sundays" means every Sunday the thing is done, and the plural is clearly shown.