tomorrow

 
Pronunciation: /təˈmɒrəʊ/

adverb

  • on the day after today: the show opens tomorrow
  • in the future, especially the near future: fickle buyers who may be gone tomorrow

noun

  • the day after today: tomorrow is going to be a special day
  • the future, especially the near future: today’s engineers are tomorrow’s buyers

Phrases

as if there was (or as though there were) no tomorrow

with no regard for the future consequences: I ate as if there was no tomorrow

tomorrow morning (or afternoon etc.)

in the morning (or afternoon etc.) of tomorrow: What are you doing tomorrow night?

tomorrow is another day

said after a bad experience to express one’s belief that the future will be better: there’s always hope because tomorrow is another day

tomorrow week

British a week from tomorrow: the Championships begin tomorrow week

Origin:

Middle English (as two words): from the preposition to + morrow. Compare with today and tonight

Spelling help

Spell tomorrow with a single m and a double r.

tomorrow morning, rise refreshed.