Tomorrow

təˈmɒrəʊ

nounBeginnerVery CommonGeneral

Definitions

2 meanings
1

The day following today.

təˈmɒrəʊ

nounneutralBeginner
General

The day after today.

I will start my diet tomorrow.

💡 Simply: Tomorrow is like hitting the 'next day' button! It's the day that comes after right now. Like, 'I'll eat pizza tomorrow,' which means you won't eat it today, but you will on the very next day.

👶 For kids: Tomorrow is the day after today!

More Examples

2

She is leaving for her vacation tomorrow.

3

Can we reschedule the appointment for tomorrow?

How It's Used

General

"We'll go to the park tomorrow."

Scheduling

"The meeting is scheduled for tomorrow."

2

On the day following today.

təˈmɒrəʊ

adverbneutralBeginner
General

On the day after today.

I will see you tomorrow.

💡 Simply: Using 'tomorrow' like a time travel word! It's saying something will happen on the day right after today. Like, 'I will go to the movies tomorrow.' You're not going today, but you're planning to go on the next day.

👶 For kids: Happening on the day after today!

More Examples

2

The store opens tomorrow at 9 AM.

3

I will call you tomorrow morning.

How It's Used

General

"I will visit the museum tomorrow."

Planning

"The concert is tomorrow."

Tip:Imagine a calendar showing the next date.

Idioms & expressions

There's no time like tomorrow

Procrastination should be avoided. You should do something immediately.

"Don't delay, fix the leaky faucet; there's no time like tomorrow."

Until tomorrow

Said as a way of saying goodbye and see someone on the following day.

"See you tomorrow"

From Middle English *tomorwe*, *tomorwe*, from Old English *tō morgen* ('on the morning'), equivalent to *to* + *morgen*.

Used since Old English, indicating a consistent concept of the day following.

Memory tip

Think of a calendar flipping forward.

tomarrowtommorowtommorow

Usage

80%Spoken
20%Written