Evening vs Nightfall

When to use each in English, with meaning, register, and examples.

Evening

Top 1,000 (very common)A1noun

Nightfall

Beyond 10,000 (less common)
Most common: Evening
 EveningNightfall
Pronunciation🇬🇧 /["/ˈiːvnɪŋ/"]/🇺🇸 /["/ˈiːvnɪŋ/"]/🇬🇧 //ˈnaɪt.fɔːl//🇺🇸 //ˈnaɪt.fɔl//
MeaningThe part of the day when it gets dark, usually after the afternoon.The time when it gets dark at night.
ExampleI love walking my dog in the evening.We should head back before nightfall.
RegisterNeutralNeutral
How commonTop 1,000 (very common)Beyond 10,000 (less common)
CEFR levelA1-
Part of speechnoun
Collocationsthis, tomorrow, yesterday, spend, begin, start, progress, wear on, light, sky, star, during the evening, for an/​the evening, in the evening, an evening off, an evening out, good evening, gala, musical, social, hold, host, open, clothes, dress, gown, during the evening, for the eveningbefore nightfall, at nightfall, after nightfall
Antonymsmorning, afternoondaybreak, dawn, sunrise
Common mistakesConfused with 'night' — evening is earlier than night., Using 'evening' to describe early afternoon events., Mispronouncing the word, especially the middle syllable.Confused with 'nightfall' and 'dusk'; both refer to the ending of daylight but are subtly different., Using 'nightfall' inappropriately in daytime contexts., Mispronouncing as if it were a two-syllable word.
Usage notesUsed commonly to refer to the time of day after work and before bedtime. It's appropriate for casual and formal contexts, but avoid saying 'evening' in very informal situations like texting friends.Used to describe the transition from day to night. Common in storytelling or poetry, less used in casual conversation.

See it in real clips

Evening
Nightfall

Frequently asked questions: Evening vs Nightfall

What's the difference between Evening and Nightfall?

Evening: The part of the day when it gets dark, usually after the afternoon. Nightfall: The time when it gets dark at night.

Which is more common: Evening and Nightfall?

Evening is the most common in everyday English.

Can you show an example of each?

Evening: I love walking my dog in the evening. Nightfall: We should head back before nightfall.

Can I use Evening and Nightfall interchangeably?

Not always. Evening and Nightfall are related and overlap in some contexts, but they differ in register, how common they are, and usage, so swapping one for another can change the meaning or tone. Check the differences above before substituting.

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