On the weekend is the american form. Where i live in southern california i often hear weekend referred to as plural eg on the weekends. At the weekend is the british usage;
DHL Delivery Schedules [Do They Deliver on Weekends?]
Should weekend be singular since there is only one weekend being referred to or should it be plural since there are multiple weekend experiences occurring (one for each employee). 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? At least in british english, at the weekend can mean 'at weekends in general' as well as 'this coming weekend'.
For example, can i say i am going to visit my friends.
What's the difference between at this weekend and this weekend when they are used in a sentence. How do we use them correctly? How does this weekend differ from on the weekend? i heard that the time expressions which differ based on when it's spoken like tomorrow or today don't require preposition and that. For the weekend could mean most of the weekend and.
In both the us and the uk, sunday is the last day of the week, and the weekend is saturday and sunday. Is this proper english and is it commonly heard elsewhere or is it just ignorance unique. On is slightly vague (possibly deliberately so) and would suggest some time during the weekend, or possibly the whole weekend.