FluencyCraft

tomorrow

"Tomorrow" is a straightforward but very useful word in English. It has two main uses as a noun and as an adverb and both are extremely common in everyday conversation and writing.

1adverbon the next day

When you say something will happen 'tomorrow', you mean it will happen on the day after today. If today is Monday, tomorrow is Tuesday. It is one of the most natural ways to talk about the near future.

everyday language · Modern, widely used

I have a big exam tomorrow, so I need to study tonight.

Can we meet tomorrow instead of today?

She said she would call me tomorrow morning.

2nounthe day after today

As a noun, 'tomorrow' is the actual day that comes after today. You can talk about it as a thing something that will arrive, something you are looking forward to, or something you are planning for.

everyday language · Modern, widely used

Tomorrow is going to be a busy day for me.

I can't wait for tomorrow it's my birthday!

Let's leave tomorrow's problems for tomorrow.

3nounfigurativethe future in general

Sometimes 'tomorrow' does not mean the specific next day it means the future in a broader sense. People use it this way when they talk about what the world or life will be like later on. You will often see this in speeches, books, or inspiring quotes.

formal writing, speeches · Modern, widely used · figurative

The decisions we make today will shape tomorrow.

Scientists are working hard to build a better tomorrow.

The children of today are the leaders of tomorrow.

Content generated by AI — may contain inaccuracies