|
- grammar - tomorrow morning vs. tomorrows morning - English Language . . .
Tomorrow morning is idiomatic English, tomorrow's morning isn't Night sleep doesn't mean anything in particular - you have had a 'good night's sleep' if you slept well all the previous night So there is no pattern to whether or not you use an apostrophe
- Punctuation in tomorrow followed by date followed by time
Tomorrow, April 7 at 10:00 a m EDIT: This question was prompted by someone telling me that it's incorrect to separate date and time with a comma; therefore I'm not asking about "helped my uncle, Jack, off a horse"-type cases in general, but whether there are any other, specifically date-and-time-related, factors at play here, as that person
- Future tenses with tomorrow - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I've been searching for the answer for quite a long time and I'm still confused about these sentences: A I have school tomorrow (it would mean it is scheduled) B I'm having school tomorrow (?
- future tense - I will be or Im going to be - English Language . . .
This form is usually used to talk about future plans "I am going to visit you soon " "I am going to the doctor tomorrow " 2 will + base form of verb (or verb1) "I will be fine " This form is usually used to talk about a promise or a voluntary action "I will call him " "I will stop smoking " 3 You can use either form to express a prediction
- Tomorrow and the day after - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I know there's a fixed phrase the day after tomorrow But is it possible to omit the second tomorrow in the following sentence? We won't be meeting tomorrow and the day after [tomorrow]
- How to say that you are going to do something really soon?
Like, if someone wants a job done within an hour, and you plan to get to it tomorrow, "I'll get on that real soon" -- meanting tomorrow -- could be misleading In such cases, a more specific statement might be better, like, "I'll start on that tomorrow" or "I should have that done by 3:00"
- Is there a word for the day after overmorrow and the day before . . .
5 I know overmorrow (the day after tomorrow) and ereyesterday (the day before yesterday) themselves are obsolete alike I would like to know whether English has ever had words for one day farther than that, I mean "the day after overmorrow" and "the day before ereyesterday"
- Is it proper grammar to say on today and on tomorrow?
In my town, people with PhD's in education use the terms, "on today" and "on tomorrow " I have never heard this usage before Every time I hear them say it, I wonder if it is correct to use the wor
|
|
|