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I'd rather spend the vacation in his house watching tv with him.

I'd rather spend the vacation at his house watching tv with him.

Are both the above sentences grammatically correct?

lekon chekon
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1 Answers1

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In general, you would use at - his house is a place on a map, and you want to be at that place.

I love hanging out at Doug's place. He has a pool, and tennis court, and a huge television. He suggested we go to Vegas over the break, but I'd rather spend the vacation at his house watching tv.

The exception would be if you are really wanting to emphasize that you want to be indoors, as opposed to in his yard or on his patio:

Doug asked me to come over and help him reshingle his roof. It is too hot for that sort of activity. I'd rather spend the vacation in his house watching tv.

Adam
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  • It's really context dependent though, because I'd say "I'd rather spend the vacation indoors." If I'm Siva's neighbor I can say "My husband going to be at Siva's house tomorrow" and I can also say "My husband is in Siva's house." if I'm standing in my front yard the next day and asked where my husband is. – ColleenV Feb 29 '16 at 20:34