'evening' vs 'night'

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tulipflower

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How can we differentiate the words 'night' and 'evening' when telling the time. For example, is 8 p.m 'eight o'clock in the evening' or 'eight o'clock at night'?
Is there any rule for that?
 

Amigos4

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You will find the answer to your question at the following link: Night vs. Evening
 

Charlie Bernstein

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It's not as black-and-white (or day-and-night) as the link implies.

Eight at night and eight in the evening are both correct and mean the same thing: 8 p.m.

I'd put it more generally: evening implies an earlier hour, night implies a later hour. Neither implies a specific range of hours.

There are several words that more exactly mean the time between sunset and dark, including dusk, twilight, and gloaming. (Gloaming is rare in the US.)
 

Tarheel

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In the gloaming he went roaming?
;-)
 
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