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  1. "workday" or "work day" - WordReference Forums

    Dec 23, 2014 · Workday [1] (noun) = (i) days upon which most people work, e.g. "Next Monday is a public holiday, but Tuesday will be a normal workday. (ii) days upon which specific people …

  2. workday, working day - WordReference Forums

    Aug 20, 2009 · A workday or work day is a day on which you work: Monday to Friday, normally. A working day could be the same as that, but is perhaps more often used for the hours of the …

  3. Difference between "working days" and "weekdays"

    Jan 24, 2013 · Hello, What's the difference between "working days" and "weekdays"? Is the second one used more frequently than the first? (In the examples like "the centre is open on …

  4. have experience doing something/ in/ with - WordReference Forums

    Dec 15, 2014 · What's the difference between the phrases below? In which cases we can use them? have experience doing something have experience with have experience in I just …

  5. Weekend or week-end: hyphen or not? | WordReference Forums

    Dec 2, 2006 · You can use "week-end" to mean the end of the week (i.e. rather than the two-day period of Saturday and Sunday), just as "year-end" means the end of the year.

  6. Do you still say "Good evening" after twelve midnight?

    Sep 25, 2009 · At the end of a workday -- even if it was 4 o'clock on a sunny summer afternoon -- on departing from work I would say "Good night" to my coworkers, or they would say "Good …