We had thanksgiving dinner at our neighbor’s. I always thought the names of holidays were proper names, and should thus be capitalized christmas, thanksgiving, etc. In general, though, in the united states the only days that come close to this situation are the day before and the day after thanksgiving, and i have not heard any word or.
I can find instances of “thanksgiving eve”, such as here on wikipedia: But please note that there is a basic syntax problem. However, i recently made a typo when talking about.
I don't think there's a general word for the day after holidays in general. The day after christmas is boxing day in the uk. I usually put a space before and after a slash, when indicating alternatives. You don't say both of and ’s, so the correct syntax is:
2 as an example, thanksgiving (us) is celebrated on the 4th thursday of november. A dinner in japan often contains rice in these. Is it correct, or should i rewrite the sentence to remove. What about merry christmas and wishing you well.
Lunch = midday (any size) supper or dinner = evening (any size), but sometimes dinner is a big special meal instead of linch or supper, like sunday dinner or. I'm looking for a way to describe that situation in a general sense. After a big dinner, i can't eat dessert thanksgiving is a dinner when most people eat turkey in europe, a dinner can last 3 hours.