At the weekend is the British usage; on the weekend is the American form.
On the weekend vs this weekend - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
grammar - " at the weekend" vs "at weekends" - English Language & Usage ...
Where I live in southern California I often hear weekend referred to as plural eg "on the weekends". Is this proper English and is it commonly heard elsewhere or is it just ignorance unique to my r...
In both the US and the UK, Sunday is the last day of the week, and the weekend is Saturday and Sunday. The only confusion is that calendars -print- the weeks with Sunday the leftmost. No one in the US actually thinks of Sunday as the first day of the week. Or if they do, then I've been living in the wrong universe all these years.
Why is weekend so called in the U.S., when it is not the end of the ...
which is the right grammatical saying from these, "I will do my work on the weekend", "I do my work in weekends" or "I will do my work at the weekend"?
Neither. The answer is “this weekend”, as in “I will see her this weekend.” Depending on which weekend you mean, you could also say “next weekend”, which is the weekend following “this weekend”. “On the weekend” is sometimes used, but sounds odd to me. “During the weekend” would only be applicable if you were clarifying that you meant not before or after, but during the ...