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at dinner (breakfast, etc.) at first notice at first sight at night at table at war | in search of in spite of | |||||
by airmail by letter by telegram by air by car by land by plane by sea by ship (boat) by train by tram by tube by water | out of date out of order out of place out of sight | |||||
arm in arm day after day day by day hand in hand night after night night by night | ||||||
a kind of a sort of | place, book, task, etc. | |||||
by accident by chance by mistake by name by sight | on account of on condition that | |||||
to be in to go to | bed | |||||
from beginning to end from day to day from east to west from head to foot from morning to (till) night from side to side in debt in demand in secret in sight in time | to be at to go to to come to to come from to leave | school, college, (the) university | ||||
to be at to leave to take to | hospital | |||||
to be at to go to | sea | |||||
in addition to in (on) behalf of in care of in case of in charge of in reference to | to be in to go to | church | ||||
to be at to put to | prison | |||||
to be in to be out of to go to | town | |||||
to ask (for) permission to catch (lose) sight of to give offence (permission) to give way to to keep house (to do housework) to keep time | to lose touch with to lose track of to make fun of to make use of to pay attention to to set fire to to shake hands with to take care of to take notice of | |||||
In these set expressions nouns combine with prepositions or verbs and acquire a new shade of meaning, expressing an adverbial relation, a state or a process. Concrete count nouns lose their nominal meaning. Thus He is in bed may mean He is ill, or He is asleep, or He is not up. But we say: There were no chairs enough and we sat on the bed.
My brother goes to school (college) means He learns there. However, if we mean the building or the institution, we use an article according to the general rules, as in: We shall meet at the school. The school isn't far from our home. Ours is a very good school. Parents are regularly invited to the school.
The noun town without an article means the nearest big centre of population as contrasted to the country or a smaller town, it may also denote the central part of a big town, as opposed to its suburbs.
To be at sea may mean "far away from the land" or (figuratively) "to feel puzzled"; to go to sea is "to become a sailor". But we say: The swimmer jumped into the sea. We lived near the sea, etc.
No article is used as a rule when two notions, very closely related, are mentioned, as in:
They looked like mother and daughter. We are no longer boy and girl.
It’s no use interfering into a quarrel between husband and wife.
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Absence of the article | | | Notes on the use of nouns denoting time and meals. |