MSN: AC/DC's 'You Shook Me All Night Long' named best classic rock love song by Radio X
AC/DC's 'You Shook Me All Night Long' named best classic rock love song by Radio X
The expression by night is typically used to contrast someone's nighttime activities to their daytime activities, especially when the nighttime activities are unusual or unexpected. You will see it very frequently in the construction X by day, Y by night. Some examples: ...treated it like a greasy spoon by day and a hotel by night I mean, if it's -- if it's somebody that is -- is living as a ...
In this night of wonder or On this night of wonder, which is correct? The full context is God from heav’nly splendour Comes to earth below; In/On this night of wonder, The world is all aglow.
Mediterranean? Lots of Mediterraneans have an afternoon siesta, so they could indulge themselves in such a preference. But Anglophones by and large don't go in for siestas, so there's probably not much call for a single term covering both "morning person, lark, early bird" and "night owl".
I forgot where but I saw the word "night-time" written like "nighttime". Now is that correct or accepted? Can it be written as a single word? I am specifically concerned about British usage. I did
Valentine’s Day may be done and dusted, but that won’t damper the love we have for classic rock. Especially banger love ballads. From Foreigner's “I Want to Know What Love Is” and Whitesnake’s “Is ...
Rock music is a form of popular music that emerged in the 1950s and can be defined as “a form of music with a strong beat”—it is difficult to be much more precise. It is also called rock and roll. Rock originated in the United States in the 1950s and then spread to other English-speaking countries and across Europe in the ’60s; by the ’90s its impact was evident globally.