The fact that you probably ate and drank would make a difference.
Water weight and food weight.
Afternoon comes before morning in the dictionary. This is because the word "afternoon" is listed before the word "morning" in alphabetical order. In terms of time, morning always comes before afternoon in a typical day cycle.
Neither. 1200 am is noon, and marks the division between morning and afternoon. 12:01 is afternoon. 11:59 is before noon, or morning.
Yes, in the morning or afternoon.
night for me and don't be so rude
Forenoon This means morning. It is not in common usage, but is a direct antonym of afternoon, meaning "before noon".
Before doing ABC's "The Tom Joyner Morning Show" he did a morning show for KKDA-FM and an afternoon show for WGCI-FM for eight years. He commuted by plane between the two jobs.
It is good to jog before breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
In the afternoon. Allegedly, your feet get bigger in the afternoon! I have read many times that the afternoon is the time to purchase shoes... however, if I buy them in the afternoon when my feet are not as swollen they are too tight to put them on the following morning at 7:00am. My suggestion is the morning is the better time unless you plan to wear the shoes as an evening shoe, then buy in the afternoon. Almost all shoes I have purchased in the afternoon have my feet sore and rubbing the insides of the shoes before noon. Hope this helps
That depends on the meaning and the context. Correct: * It was our last afternoon together before the end of the vacation. * Yesterday afternoon I talked to them about the problem. * There is no issue with the first sentence above. I believe we are discussing "last afternoon" in the context of a sentence like the second one above.* in that context, if we are talking today, before 12 noon, of an event that occurred yesterday in the afternoon, we say "last afternoon" because the event occurred during the "last" afternoon. However if we are talking today in the evening or in the night of the same event, we cannot say last "afternoon" because there has been another afternoon that has passed since that event occurred. In such a case we must say "yesterday afternoon". The same rule should apply for "last morning" and "yesterday morning".
Meridian is the Latin word for Noon. Ante Meridian (AM) means before noon, and Post Meridian (PM) means after noon.
The terms "am" and "pm" originate from Latin. "Am" stands for "ante meridiem," which means before noon, while "pm" stands for "post meridiem," which means after noon. They are used to indicate whether it is morning or afternoon/evening.
"Good [morning/afternoon/evening], ladies and gentlemen..." "Thank you for joining me today to discuss..." "Imagine a world where..." "I'm honored to be standing here before you to talk about..."