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  • Southeastern Manitoba man drowned Christmas Eve while clearing snow from pond
    A 58-year-old Manitoba man drowned on Christmas Eve after his skid-steer loader fell through the ice on a pond in the RM of Ste. Anne, a rural community southeast of Winnipeg.
    12/25/2024 - 12:30 pm | View Link
  • Jenna Bush Hager Enjoys Christmas Eve with Her 3 Kids: 'Merriest, Everything!'
    The 'Today' co-host is mom to daughters Mila, 11, and Poppy, 9, and son Hal, 5, whom she shares with husband Henry Hager
    12/25/2024 - 9:38 am | View Link
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  • on a cold night/in a cold night | WordReference Forums
    The natural thing to say is on a cold night — or any specific night or day: on that night, on the night before we left, on Christmas Eve, on the last day of term, on my birthday, on St Swithin’s Day, etc. If you use in, you imply during [the course of] a certain day or night. There are few situations in which that would be appropriate.
    12/19/2024 - 5:40 pm | View Link
  • On Christmas or in Christmas?
    In British English: at Christmas, on Christmas Day. I also can't think of any circumstances in which I'd say in Christmas
    12/19/2024 - 2:55 pm | View Link
  • At Christmas Eve/ In Christmas Eve / On Christmas Eve
    On Christmas Eve. S. St. Nick Senior Member. English Jan 22, 2009 #3 "On Christmas Eve" is the only ...
    12/19/2024 - 12:39 pm | View Link
  • "on/at Christmas"
    As stated previously we use at Christmas, on Christmas Day. I should clarify that slightly. We do not say on Christmas if we are describing the time of an action. If you were to search for "on Christmas" on UK websites only you could find "Spotlight on Christmas", but that is a metaphorical spotlight shining on the Christmas period.
    12/19/2024 - 2:24 am | View Link
  • New Year's Eve
    I think in general, we use "on" to mean the exact day when a festival is celebrated and "at" to mean the general time around the festival, that is, from a couple of days before the festival to a couple of days after it but I wonder whether "at" could be used in such a sense with "New Year's Eve" because "(on X's) eve" is a very specific time reference, but then I suppose it can be.
    12/18/2024 - 5:31 am | View Link
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