tomorrow

UK /təˈmɒɹəʊ/ US /təˈmɒɹəʊ/
adv 4noun 2

Definitions

adv

1

On the day after the present day.

He has vamp'd an old speech, and the court to their sorrow, / Shall hear him harangue against Prior to morrow.

It was eight o'clock to-morrow evening when I buckled up my travelling writing-desk in its leather case, paid my Bill, and got on my warm coats and wrappers.

2

At some point in the future; later on

If you don’t get your life on track today, you’re going to be very sorry tomorrow.

3

On next (period of time other than a day, such as a week or a month), following the present (period of time).

Resolved, &c. That the House be Called over again on Tomorrow Month, being the Six-and-twentieth Day of April next.

'You shall go to it on to-morrow week, so make haste and get well!'

4

On the next day (following some date in the past).

To prevent this, a committee for peace was proposed for to-morrow, who heard the ministers and Mr. Anderson upon the heads of the affair, but in vain; when their complaint was given in in Synod, and referred to the next Synod […]

[…] after he hade drunk liberally in the Advocate's house that same day, went to bed in health, but was taken up stark dead to-morrow morning; and such was the testimony of honour heaven was pleased to allow Montrose's pompuous funerals.

noun

1

The day after the present day.

Tomorrow will be sunny.

'Go home, Nilghai,' said Dick; 'go home to your lonely little bed, and leave me in peace. I am about to turn in till to-morrow.'

2

A future period or time.

It’s 1965 and we certainly welcome this new year with hopes that all of our tomorrows will bring happiness.

Surgoinsville, Tennessee, hasn’t had a doctor since 1965. That’s when the community’s only doctor died. Day after day, Surgoinsville’s modern medical clinic stands empty, useless. […] Surgoinsville’s clinic faces a lot of empty tomorrows.

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