Quote:
Originally Posted by Rusty
Both 'in' and 'at' can be used.
Your sentence works well with 'in'.
You can live in a time and you can live at a time. The distinction, in my mind anyway, is that 'in' is more general (within or inside a broad definition of time, like an age or an era) and that 'at' focuses on a more specific instance of time, like a date, an event or a memory).
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Thanks.
If
age/era=a particular period of history, could we use both
at and
in?
-We are living at the internet age.
-We are living in the internet age.
-We are living at the internet era.
-We are living in the internet era.