Home
A Word A Day
Main Index
Online Tutoring
Nursery Rhymes
Beauties of English
What is NEW?
Grammar
Intermediate Level
Advanced English
f.a.q
Tips
Plain English
Vocabulary
Etymology
Synonyms
Antonyms
TOEFL
GRE
GMAT
Your English Teacher
Business Letters
English Articles
Difficult Words
Social Letters
Successful Writing
Correct Usages
Short Stories
English Poems
English Songs
Famous Quotations
About Us
Contact Us
Advertise With Us

[?] Subscribe To This Site

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

 

Forward in Time or Up in Time or Back in Time





Previous Page



Forward in Time or Up in Time or Back in Time :




For most people you move an event forward by scheduling it to happen sooner, but other people imagine the event being moved forward into the future, postponed.


This is what most—but not all—people mean by saying they want to move an event back—later. Usage is also split on whether moving an event up means making it happen sooner (most common) or later (less common).


The result is widespread confusion. When using these expressions make clear your meaning by the context in which you use them.


“We need to move the meeting forward” is ambiguous; “we need to move the meeting forward to an earlier date” is not.


Just to confuse things further, when you move the clock ahead in the spring for daylight saving time, you make it later; but when you move a meeting ahead, you make it sooner. Isn’t English wonderful?





























Common Errors Index




From Forward in Time to HOME PAGE










footer for Forward in Time page