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“What time…?” or “At what time…?” - what is more grammatically correct?
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In(How many years) have you been married?/studying English?More confusion about by/until - starting a questionIs the sentence “I've decided to check my Facebook account one time at the day” correct?Expression like “just in time”Yet another since/for questionIs there a “at some time in the future”?How to say this time 00:00 in words in English?Should I put an article before “half” when talking about time?“At what time” Vs. “What time”Given the answer “It's my first time here”, what questions could I ask to receive that answer?
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This question may sound silly, but it has been bugging me for years.
If I ask a question about a precise point in time, should I say "What time..." or "At what time..."?
For example,
At what time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
or
What time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
prepositions time wh-questions
add a comment |
This question may sound silly, but it has been bugging me for years.
If I ask a question about a precise point in time, should I say "What time..." or "At what time..."?
For example,
At what time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
or
What time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
prepositions time wh-questions
add a comment |
This question may sound silly, but it has been bugging me for years.
If I ask a question about a precise point in time, should I say "What time..." or "At what time..."?
For example,
At what time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
or
What time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
prepositions time wh-questions
This question may sound silly, but it has been bugging me for years.
If I ask a question about a precise point in time, should I say "What time..." or "At what time..."?
For example,
At what time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
or
What time does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
prepositions time wh-questions
prepositions time wh-questions
edited 11 hours ago
Jasper
20k44174
20k44174
asked 12 hours ago
brilliantbrilliant
1,03021529
1,03021529
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
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The initial preposition at in such contexts is entirely optional, but it usually wouldn't be included (although in reality we usually use when rather than [at] what time anyway :).
OP's specific example happens to include a "location-based" clause based on at [the swimming pool], but it might be worth looking at two slightly different contexts...
1a: What time does the shop open?
1b: At what time does the shop open?
1c: What time does the shop open at?
...and...
2a: Where did you come?
2b: From where did you come?
2c: Where did you come from?
In my opinion, both 'b' versions above are at least slightly stilted / awkward. But whereas 1a and 1c carry the same meaning, that's not the case with the second pair. 2a (without the preposition from) is effectively asking where you ended up, not where you started from (speaker might be asking your final position in a race, for example; Where did I come [in the marathon]? I did pretty good, actually - I came third, out of 2000 runners).
The point being that because there's no credible alternative meaning in the first pair that depends on whether the preposition is included or not, it's entirely a stylistic choice (and on average we don't bother with unnecessary words). But the second example shows that we do include the preposition where it's required to avoid ambiguity.
add a comment |
As user070221 notes, both sentences are commonly used in American English. In some formal speech and writing, "At what time" is more acceptable than "When" or "What time", especially when "a precise point in time" is being requested.
I am an American who grew up in a town with many native speakers of Spanish. To my ear, both examples in the original post sound like overly literal translations of "¿A qué hora?" To my ear, "When" is a more natural way of saying this in English:
When does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
add a comment |
Both the sentences are correct and mean the same thing. what time is just a shorter form of at what time
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
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active
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votes
The initial preposition at in such contexts is entirely optional, but it usually wouldn't be included (although in reality we usually use when rather than [at] what time anyway :).
OP's specific example happens to include a "location-based" clause based on at [the swimming pool], but it might be worth looking at two slightly different contexts...
1a: What time does the shop open?
1b: At what time does the shop open?
1c: What time does the shop open at?
...and...
2a: Where did you come?
2b: From where did you come?
2c: Where did you come from?
In my opinion, both 'b' versions above are at least slightly stilted / awkward. But whereas 1a and 1c carry the same meaning, that's not the case with the second pair. 2a (without the preposition from) is effectively asking where you ended up, not where you started from (speaker might be asking your final position in a race, for example; Where did I come [in the marathon]? I did pretty good, actually - I came third, out of 2000 runners).
The point being that because there's no credible alternative meaning in the first pair that depends on whether the preposition is included or not, it's entirely a stylistic choice (and on average we don't bother with unnecessary words). But the second example shows that we do include the preposition where it's required to avoid ambiguity.
add a comment |
The initial preposition at in such contexts is entirely optional, but it usually wouldn't be included (although in reality we usually use when rather than [at] what time anyway :).
OP's specific example happens to include a "location-based" clause based on at [the swimming pool], but it might be worth looking at two slightly different contexts...
1a: What time does the shop open?
1b: At what time does the shop open?
1c: What time does the shop open at?
...and...
2a: Where did you come?
2b: From where did you come?
2c: Where did you come from?
In my opinion, both 'b' versions above are at least slightly stilted / awkward. But whereas 1a and 1c carry the same meaning, that's not the case with the second pair. 2a (without the preposition from) is effectively asking where you ended up, not where you started from (speaker might be asking your final position in a race, for example; Where did I come [in the marathon]? I did pretty good, actually - I came third, out of 2000 runners).
The point being that because there's no credible alternative meaning in the first pair that depends on whether the preposition is included or not, it's entirely a stylistic choice (and on average we don't bother with unnecessary words). But the second example shows that we do include the preposition where it's required to avoid ambiguity.
add a comment |
The initial preposition at in such contexts is entirely optional, but it usually wouldn't be included (although in reality we usually use when rather than [at] what time anyway :).
OP's specific example happens to include a "location-based" clause based on at [the swimming pool], but it might be worth looking at two slightly different contexts...
1a: What time does the shop open?
1b: At what time does the shop open?
1c: What time does the shop open at?
...and...
2a: Where did you come?
2b: From where did you come?
2c: Where did you come from?
In my opinion, both 'b' versions above are at least slightly stilted / awkward. But whereas 1a and 1c carry the same meaning, that's not the case with the second pair. 2a (without the preposition from) is effectively asking where you ended up, not where you started from (speaker might be asking your final position in a race, for example; Where did I come [in the marathon]? I did pretty good, actually - I came third, out of 2000 runners).
The point being that because there's no credible alternative meaning in the first pair that depends on whether the preposition is included or not, it's entirely a stylistic choice (and on average we don't bother with unnecessary words). But the second example shows that we do include the preposition where it's required to avoid ambiguity.
The initial preposition at in such contexts is entirely optional, but it usually wouldn't be included (although in reality we usually use when rather than [at] what time anyway :).
OP's specific example happens to include a "location-based" clause based on at [the swimming pool], but it might be worth looking at two slightly different contexts...
1a: What time does the shop open?
1b: At what time does the shop open?
1c: What time does the shop open at?
...and...
2a: Where did you come?
2b: From where did you come?
2c: Where did you come from?
In my opinion, both 'b' versions above are at least slightly stilted / awkward. But whereas 1a and 1c carry the same meaning, that's not the case with the second pair. 2a (without the preposition from) is effectively asking where you ended up, not where you started from (speaker might be asking your final position in a race, for example; Where did I come [in the marathon]? I did pretty good, actually - I came third, out of 2000 runners).
The point being that because there's no credible alternative meaning in the first pair that depends on whether the preposition is included or not, it's entirely a stylistic choice (and on average we don't bother with unnecessary words). But the second example shows that we do include the preposition where it's required to avoid ambiguity.
edited 11 hours ago
answered 11 hours ago
FumbleFingersFumbleFingers
46.3k156123
46.3k156123
add a comment |
add a comment |
As user070221 notes, both sentences are commonly used in American English. In some formal speech and writing, "At what time" is more acceptable than "When" or "What time", especially when "a precise point in time" is being requested.
I am an American who grew up in a town with many native speakers of Spanish. To my ear, both examples in the original post sound like overly literal translations of "¿A qué hora?" To my ear, "When" is a more natural way of saying this in English:
When does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
add a comment |
As user070221 notes, both sentences are commonly used in American English. In some formal speech and writing, "At what time" is more acceptable than "When" or "What time", especially when "a precise point in time" is being requested.
I am an American who grew up in a town with many native speakers of Spanish. To my ear, both examples in the original post sound like overly literal translations of "¿A qué hora?" To my ear, "When" is a more natural way of saying this in English:
When does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
add a comment |
As user070221 notes, both sentences are commonly used in American English. In some formal speech and writing, "At what time" is more acceptable than "When" or "What time", especially when "a precise point in time" is being requested.
I am an American who grew up in a town with many native speakers of Spanish. To my ear, both examples in the original post sound like overly literal translations of "¿A qué hora?" To my ear, "When" is a more natural way of saying this in English:
When does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
As user070221 notes, both sentences are commonly used in American English. In some formal speech and writing, "At what time" is more acceptable than "When" or "What time", especially when "a precise point in time" is being requested.
I am an American who grew up in a town with many native speakers of Spanish. To my ear, both examples in the original post sound like overly literal translations of "¿A qué hora?" To my ear, "When" is a more natural way of saying this in English:
When does Billy arrive at the swimming pool?
answered 11 hours ago
JasperJasper
20k44174
20k44174
add a comment |
add a comment |
Both the sentences are correct and mean the same thing. what time is just a shorter form of at what time
add a comment |
Both the sentences are correct and mean the same thing. what time is just a shorter form of at what time
add a comment |
Both the sentences are correct and mean the same thing. what time is just a shorter form of at what time
Both the sentences are correct and mean the same thing. what time is just a shorter form of at what time
answered 11 hours ago
Kshitij SinghKshitij Singh
1,779219
1,779219
add a comment |
add a comment |
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