In the case of no later than vs not later than, google finds 25 vs 12 million hits, indicating. I understand that you can say, within 30 days of receiving your application, but i am seeing more and more within 30 days after your application is received. The fundamental issue is of course that a month.
If not, would there be a clearer way to put it, to refer to today and the following 9 days? Hence, if within two working days were said on a thursday, it would probably mean before the end of monday. There's also the perennial question of whether the last day ends on the multiple of 24 hours from the time when the deadline was given, if it means midnight of that day, or closing time of that.
Last week is strictly the period of seven days ending at midnight on sunday and the last two weeks is strictly the period of fourteen days ending at. I often use google hit counts as a rough measure of how valid an expression is. Fill out the entry form within 10 days before your flight. In conclusion, the expression within the next two days does not have an exact.
The form must be filled out within 10 days before the flight. For example, this project must be finished within 30 days is. Within is regarded as specifying an upper limit: I would read the first as referring to a deadline, the second referring to a total accumulation of days spent.
What is the meaning of within in these sentences? In is sometimes regarded as. Would you think the next 10 days includes today?