May 30, 2025ย ยท The phrases " on tomorrow," " on today," and " on yesterday " are commonly heard in the southern region of the United States. They are acceptable in casual speech and other informal โ€ฆ

Nov 27, 2024ย ยท Tomorrow morning is idiomatic English, tomorrow's morning isn't. Night sleep doesn't mean anything in particular - you have had a 'good night's sleep' if you slept well all the previous โ€ฆ

Dec 12, 2016ย ยท In my town, people with PhD's in education use the terms, "on today" and "on tomorrow." I have never heard this usage before. Every time I hear them say it, I wonder if it is correct to use the โ€ฆ

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Dec 15, 2022ย ยท The contraction "tomorrow's" is used to mean "tomorrow is" all the time. Just search for "tomorrow's going to" to find all manner of examples.

In German Morgen still means both morning and tomorrow; in English morrow, a variant of morning, came to be used in the latter sense. The to- is probably a fossilized definite article. In German, with โ€ฆ

5 The words today, tomorrow and yesterday are not capitalized. However, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday are capitalized.

Tomorrow, April 7 at 10:00 a.m. EDIT: This question was prompted by someone telling me that it's incorrect to separate date and time with a comma; therefore I'm not asking about "helped my uncle, โ€ฆ

Jan 11, 2016ย ยท I know there's a fixed phrase the day after tomorrow. But is it possible to omit the second tomorrow in the following sentence? We won't be meeting tomorrow and the day after [tomorrow].

Which is correct? I will transfer the amount on tomorrow. I will transfer the amount by tomorrow.

Jan 11, 2016ย ยท I know there's a fixed phrase the day after tomorrow. But is it possible to omit the second tomorrow in the following sentence? We won't be meeting tomorrow and the day after [tomorrow].

Which is correct? I will transfer the amount on tomorrow. I will transfer the amount by tomorrow.

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