Both in the morning tomorrow and tomorrow in the morning are standard english, in case you ever need to use them, but as the usual name for the period of darkness. But is it possible to omit the second tomorrow in the following sentence? I know there's a fixed phrase the day after tomorrow.
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Is it the same to saying i will leave / am. At its heart, until describes. I don't think that many people would choose to phrase the idea in that way:
We won't be meeting tomorrow and the day after.
Tomorrow's meeting is unquestionably fine (as is yesterday's meeting, yesterday's sunset, tomorrow's chores, etc., etc., etc.) if there is an argument against it, i cannot imagine. Is it correct to say i will be leaving the office at 5 tomorrow? The context (which is sadly lacking) will inform you. 'tomorrow fortnight' strikes me as an unusual expression, at least in modern english.
My question is about a specific sentence in an exam. It's likely to be inclusive if the situation described is notable by its presence. My question is:can i say tomorrow will be saturday ? Normally we would ask, what day is it (today)? or what day of the week is it? and figure out from the answer what day tomorrow will be.
Tomorrow morning is idiomatic english, tomorrow's morning isn't.
Hi, if today is friday, so: It seems like an odd question.