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The phrase "a day before a" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used to indicate a specific time frame, typically referring to the day preceding an event or occasion.
Example: "We will have a meeting scheduled for Monday, so please prepare your reports a day before a."
Alternatives: "the day prior to" or "one day ahead of".
Exact(60)
A day before, a federal judge upheld a similar ban against a group seeking to use the Great Lawn for a rally on Saturday.
She trains six hours a day, six days a week, sometimes seven hours a day before a competition.
The report comes a day before a national report from the association.
The fee's demise came a day before a planned protest outside the Capitol.
Apple's report came a day before a product announcement that has the industry speculating about the company's next direction.
The suspect was released a day before a judge was scheduled to rule on whether his continued detention was justified.
Fighting between government forces and pro-Russian separatists intensified a day before a cease-fire took effect.
An agreement to distribute the migrants over several countries came a day before a European Union meeting on the issue.
A day before a pivotal House debate on the campaign finance law, she cannot say how she will vote.
· December 7: Iraq hands a 12,000-page declaration of its arms programmes to UN inspectors, a day before a deadline set by the UN resolution.
The NotPetya attack originated in Ukraine, according to security researchers, apparently timed to strike a day before a holiday marking the 1996 adoption of Ukraine's first constitution.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com