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I'm trying to check if this sentence is correct By could also be used as a synonym of near, as in stop by (near) the intersection, with a meaning more similar to stop at Is this reservation for the holiday inn

Or, should i use is this reservation at the holiday inn? When used as a verb stop by connotes a brief pauses, and usually implies continued motion after the pause I have seen a room type at a hotel like below

Family room 2 bedrooms &amp

Living room run of the house everything is ok except the run of the house thing What does it exactly mean here 1 there's a holiday inn just up the road from me that gives its address as the squareabout, because it's in the middle of a large and relatively square roundabout. Goes hand in hand with people who want to hide their head in the sand or have the wool

I am used to saying i am in india. But somewhere i saw it said i am at puri (oriisa) I would like to know the differences between in and at in the above two sentences. I'm writing a bio for a friend, and i mention many hotels and restaurants, some of which are foreign

My plane lands on the 29th of august

I'll arrive on the last week of august Or i'll arrive in the last week of august Web searches show that both prepositi. In the uncountable form, 'holiday' is the time away

This is the 'go on holiday [for a few days]' form The measure ('for a few days') is optional There is no real difference in the overall meaning of the two forms, though the first might be felt to slightly emphasise the fact that the holiday has a specific fixed length. 0 make a regard to an upcoming holiday such as christmas, halloween, the new year, or really any holiday examples

Stop at is a definitive stop, with the emphasis on a particular location

This is the most appropriate usage for the bus making a stop

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