Which is correct at the present or at present?
Which is correct at the present or at present?
In English, you cannot say “at the present” unless you use a noun – e.g. “at the present time”. Normally we would simply say “at present”.
Is it work in or work at?
You work in a type of place such as a bank, shop, or factory: She works in a library. You work at a particular place or organization: She works at the Library of Congress.
Do you say I work for or work with?
“I work for” sounds like you have a boss at Microsoft, whereas “I work with” sounds as if you work alongside people at Microsoft, but do not report to anyone. “I work with” can mean the same thing as “I work for” but it can be slightly ambiguous.
Can you say at present?
‘In the present time’ is not the correct expression to use when talking about what you are doing now or around now. The correct presposition is ‘at’: I’m working as a teacher at the present time.
Where do we use at present?
She must see more of him to understand his ways; at present she only felt they were agreeable. I would not be chasing the oil sector at present; avoid. I am well at present; the cancer has not made itself felt yet.
Do I use in or at?
“In” for Location. Deciding which word you should be using comes down to a question of where. “At” is used when you are at the top, bottom or end of something; at a specific address; at a general location; and at a point. “In” is used in a space, small vehicle, water, neighborhood, city and country.
Are you in the office or at?
The preposition “in” in “I am in the office” implies that the office is a room and you are inside that room. The word “at”, on the other hand, conveys the general idea of the location of one’s office and is often interchangeable with “at work”. To sum it up: I am in my/the office.
How do you say I am working in a company?
The correct answer one is to say “I’m currently working for a company. You should only say “I’m currently working at so-and-so…” mentioning the name of the company itself. Eg. “I’m currently working at Sterling Bank.”
Do you say employee for or at?
Employee takes only of. You could of course, say “I am employed with” and “I work for”, but not “employee for” or “employee with”. I agree that they all sound OK. But “at” would be more natural to me, in this specific context (“new at”).
How do you use at present?
Examples of ‘at present’ in a sentence at present
- She must see more of him to understand his ways; at present she only felt they were agreeable.
- I would not be chasing the oil sector at present; avoid.
- I am well at present; the cancer has not made itself felt yet.
How do you say present in a formal?
currently
- at present.
- directly.
- forthwith.
- presently.
- pronto.
- right away.
- right now.
- straightaway.
What do you mean by at present?
at present. : at or during this time : now.