Aida
I found a post in Reddit, which says: “I checked my phone to see that my hotel wants to cancel my 4 month old reservation the literal week of the event. Looks like I may be driving back and forth for both days. “ Do you add “for” before the literal week? And I read somewhere that this week comes from a bible that says God created the universe in six days ( and he rested on the seventh day ) , so is this a nation holidays or a week for volunteers work??? For What is this week? He also says the hotel gives their rooms for homeless shelter. https://www.reddit.com/r/HardFestival/comments/1efe7gj/booked_hotel_months_ago_and_now_they_want_to/ Thank you.
23 nov 2024 04:09
Risposte · 5
1
No, you don't need 'for'. The phrase 'the week of the event' refers to the time of cancellation, not the time the reservation was going to be for. Sor
10 ore fa
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