You said, 'The new school rules are in effect starting Monday.' Could I say 'The new school rules are in effect from Monday.'? or We're going to resume our work starting Monday. or They will continue the project from Monday. Is the meaning the same in those two cases? Thank you.
All of them are grammatically correct. But starting Monday sounds natural in all sentences. Especially, "continue the project from Monday "sounds very awkward. The next one might be, "They will resume the project on Monday."
Thank you very much❤❤🎉🎉😊😊
Thank you for your comment.❤️😊
This is the Best place for improving listening skills
Thank you for your encouraging and lovely comment.❤️👋😊
Very Interesting podcast.
I literally enjoyed it.
Thank you for your encouraging and motivating comment.
❤❤❤
Thank you for your lovely comment and for watching
thanks a lot ❤
You're welcome. It 's always a pleasure.👋❤️😊
I need to brush up on my Spanish before traveling to Mexico.
It's totally correct.👍😊
She decided to brush up on her presentation skills before the big meeting
Good job. Thank you for your comment and your effort.
Who is from India here??
In effect : فعالة سارية المفعول
The new school rules are in effect starting Monday
القواعد المدرسية الجديدة سارية المفعول ابتداء من يوم الاثنين
Perfect! Thank you for your comment.
Who is From Brazil here?
Wear a jacket to prevent catching a cold.
Your example is correct, but this would be better. "Wear a jacket to prevent yourself from catching a cold."
She found herself in hot water after forgetting to submit the report on time.
Perfect. Completely correct. Congrats.👏😊
You said, 'The new school rules are in effect starting Monday.'
Could I say 'The new school rules are in effect from Monday.'?
or
We're going to resume our work starting Monday.
or
They will continue the project from Monday.
Is the meaning the same in those two cases?
Thank you.
All of them are grammatically correct. But starting Monday sounds natural in all sentences. Especially, "continue the project from Monday "sounds very awkward. The next one might be, "They will resume the project on Monday."
@ Got it. Thank you. It still works for starting (next year, 2025, this summer etc) right?