The English language has an abundance of little-used words which relate to the days that come before or after the present one. We have words for “the quality of being tomorrow” (tomorrowness) and for “of or relating to yesterday” (yester, yestreen, and pridian). There is also tomorrower, meaning "a procrastinator," and of course mañana ("an indefinite time in the future").
Tomorrow functions as a noun and as an adverb; you should avoid employing it as an adjective or verb.
Adverb I'll finish the housework tomorrow. Is it supposed to rain tomorrow? He has an interview tomorrow. NounTomorrow is a school day. She is giving a presentation at tomorrow's meeting. Who knows what tomorrow may bring? designing the car of tomorrow Today's children are tomorrow's leaders. All we can do is hope for a better tomorrow. See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Oktoberfest is hotter than helles at Redlight, Redlight, where their very own helles lager — Streets of Gold — will be pouring alongside fest beer and loads of other liquid refreshment come tomorrow’s party. Amy Drew Thompson, Orlando Sentinel, 15 Sep. 2022 In other words, Silicon Valley is twisting the corkscrew like there’s no tomorrow and generally expecting applause for it. Anthony Lydgate, WIRED, 6 Sep. 2022 That would be her daughter Olympia, who turns 5 tomorrow. Brandon Griggs, CNN, 31 Aug. 2022 Smoke from the #OakFire will arrive over portions of the Bay Area beginning tomorrow morning. Bill Hutchinson, ABC News, 25 July 2022 The first two half-hour episodes premiere tomorrow (July 21). Sabrina Park, Harper's BAZAAR, 20 July 2022 In short, Preston has selected Guest as a Starfighter because of his extraordinary video game abilities — the warrior of tomorrow is, in essence, today’s video kid. Duane Byrge, The Hollywood Reporter, 13 July 2022 This year's edition is happening today and tomorrow, July 12 and July 13, and as always, the retailer is offering huge deals. Rachel Simon, EW.com, 12 July 2022 In advance of the second half of Stranger Things season four premiering tomorrow, The Hollywood Reporter has learned that Netflix and 21 Laps are staying in the supernatural business. Rebecca Sun, The Hollywood Reporter, 30 June 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Adverb
Middle English to morgen, from Old English tō morgen, from tō to + morgen morrow, morning — more at morn