Did you mean tomorrow?
Definitions
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Etymologies
- Middle English to morow, from Old English tō morgenne, in the morning : tō, at, on; see to + morgenne, dative of morgen, morning.
Examples
“Couple the visuals with magnificent casting, brilliant performances, iconic, well-done songs and a rousing orchestra and you've got a production that will tear at your heart strings and, because "Tomorrow" is another day, will make that same heart soar.”
The Huffington Post: James Scarborough: "Annie," Musical Theatre West
“Tomorrow is a thorough apartment cleaning and maybe baking and maybe going out to a bar.”
“Tomorrow is the same busy schedule with more: Grandma's, shoe/clothes shopping, food shopping perhaps, then food preparing ... hopefully when I'm done I'll have been satisfied with my work enough to enjoy Fantasy Gala at 6.”
“Tomorrow is the scheduled launch of the Kepler spacecraft, which is going to be looking for Earth-like planets.”
"I'm not doing your birthday again, but we'll do it on Monday."
“In fact, if the price tag for leadership in the Car Market of Tomorrow is a mere $1.2 billion, then Greece and Uruguay could enter the competition as well ...”
Synthetic Fuels Program, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
“Thanksgiving: Tomorrow is the day of giving thanks for lots of stuff like imperialism and mashed potatoes here in my neck of the woods.”
“Tomorrow is the long-celebrated, and often disturbing, Koloss Head-Munching Day.”
“Tomorrow is a tough stage but it's not as tough as today was, so we've got to try and recuperate for Monday," Di Luca said.”
“Tomorrow is a triple birthday and an episode of Hunter.”
“Detective Conan: Manga File 699 – Tomorrow is there … Akai is coming?!”
Detective Conan: Manga File 700 to 704 – The “Target Located” arc « Undercover
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