Do you write at home or at home?
For example, if I say I am at home, do I write at home or at home?
I think home is right, that's why I write it like this, but I feel more at home somehow.
For example, if I say I am at home, do I write at home or at home?
I think home is right, that's why I write it like this, but I feel more at home somehow.
What does this mean and what could be the answer?
adhere to think of consider oneself / something to be
I haven't received the notification yet. But as soon as I do, I'll send it to you.
I can't come to school today because I don't feel well.
"…Unfortunately, there's no kitchen, but that doesn't matter because our huge budget allows us to eat in the restaurants every day." Many thanks to everyone! š
Both are correct.
I am now Home at my desk. I like this way of writing visually as well as the sense of cosiness and confidentiality. I think I’m writing this for the first time “home”.š
I have these feelings at home š Haha apologise š
Interesting, how different you even tick emotionally in spelling. When I think about my home, I always see a warm light. I also see that at “I’m going home, I’m home, I’m coming home.” At “I’m going home, I’m home, I’m coming from home” I don’t see this warm, illuminated home at all. These words are for me simply local adverbs like “here, there, there, everywhere, nowhere, somewhere, outside, somewhere else” etc., to which I have no emotional reference. I feel a lot more about “I’m going home, I’m home, I’m coming from home.” Then there is again this pleasant warmth. How are you doing?
šæš·Thank you for your star. šŗš
I also thank you many times and wish you a warm Sunday evening at your home š Dear greetings Bugs š°
– Thanks for your answer and a pleasant Sunday evening at home. Love greeting from Spanš·
At home I think about warmth and relaxation. To be sure about the good feeling and not have to do anything, and if I get help with it.
When I write at home it is more strenuous and more on a need to feel than on a pleasant feeling š¤
I write “home”. I don’t care if that’s right. I’m still writing “riding” what’s wrong, but once was right. That’s how I learned it at school.
It IS (also) right, lucky.
I can also understand the people who, for example, still write “Ī²” and even apply the “Ī²/ss” rules in force before the legislative reform – even if the now applicable Ī²/ss rules for Otto normal consumers have to be easier to understand and thus have to lead to more spelling accuracy. That’s not the case. People make more mistakes than ever.
People could write correctly if they wanted. You know the difference between “seid” and “side”, but do not make the effort or do not take the time to read the written again before they send it. Even the automatic spelling correction is paradoxically often responsible for the lack of spelling correctness.
Hello,
both spellings, āhomeā and āhomeā are correct, but have different uses. āhomeā (with spaces) is the formal variant and describes the state of being in oneās own apartment. In a sentence like āI am at homeā this is the right spell. āhomeā (as a word) is often used in a language of change and generally refers to the place where you live. While āhomeā is less formal, āhomeā is preferred in written and formal contexts.
I hope I could help.
LG
Both of them.
Thank you. How good. I’d rather write at home.