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tomorrow

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UK:**UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/təˈmɒrəʊ/US:USA pronunciation: IPA and respellingUSA pronunciation: IPA/təˈmɔroʊ, -ˈmɑroʊ/ ,USA pronunciation: respelling(tə môrō, -morō)


WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
to•mor•row /təˈmɔroʊ, -ˈmɑroʊ/USA pronunciation   n. 
  1. the day following today:[uncountable]Tomorrow is another day.
  2. a future period or time:[uncountable] the high-tech world of tomorrow. [countable] stored up a lot of empty tomorrows.

adv. 
  1. on the day following today:I'll see you tomorrow.
  2. at some future time.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
to•mor•row  (tə môrō, -morō),USA pronunciation n. 
  1. the day following today:Tomorrow is supposed to be sunny.
  2. a future period or time:the stars of tomorrow.

adv. 
  1. on the morrow;
    on the day following today:Come tomorrow at this same time.
  2. at some future time:We shall rest easy tomorrow if we work for peace today.
  • Middle English to mor(o)we, to morghe (see to, morrow), variant of to mor(o)wen, to morghen (see morn) 1225–75

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
tomorrow /təˈmɒrəʊ/ n
  1. the day after today
  2. the future
adv
  1. on the day after today
  2. at some time in the future
Etymology: Old English tō morgenne, from to1 (at, on) + morgenne, dative of morgen morning; see morrow
'tomorrow' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
Collocations: tomorrow [night, afternoon, morning], tomorrow is another day, will [call, come, respond] tomorrow, more...

Forum discussions with the word(s) "tomorrow" in the title:

--Will it snow tomorrow? --Yes, sure./No, not at all.
...he <would><will> have been... when I <saw><see> him tomorrow. [reported speech]
...the project that <had had> to be finished by tomorrow as it <had been> cancelled.
...tomorrow I'll make sure I reply/have replied/replied
.If it was my mother’s birthday tomorrow, I’d cook dinner for her
'For tomorrow'
'See tomorrow' or 'Shall see tomorrow'
'To hit it up' and 'to shoot for tomorrow': Colloquial?
'When do you start/finish work tomorrow?' Incorrect English?
‘It will rain tomorrow’ or ‘It’s going to rain tomorrow’?
(At) this time tomorrow
(at) tomorrow('s) night, tomorrow at night, tomorrow tonight
(Even) if he would help us tomorrow, after what you said to him today, he won't.
(Even) if it rains tomorrow,
(the?) day after tomorrow
(the) tomorrow's meeting/appointment, etc
(Tomorrow) after rehearsals, we would all troop off to the cafeteria.
(Tomorrow) He needs us to do the task (tomorrow).
[like there is] [like there was] [as if there were] no tomorrow
*Do you have a plan tomorrow?
a better communication today, means a minor disease tomorrow
A meeting to join tomorrow, he goes to bed earlier
a month tomorrow
A new habit will be starting from tomorrow
A new master will come tomorrow who will teach you German
a number of full-scale homes of tomorrow traveled through fairs and department stores.
a promise tomorrow is worth a lot less than trying today
a refusal. Can’t tomorrow
about this time tomorrow
About tomorrow/Of tomorrow
more...

Look up "tomorrow" at Merriam-Webster
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