Tomorrow's Tomorrow is a pioneering sociological study of black girls growing up in the city. .Joyce A. Ladner spent four years interviewing, observing, and socializing with more than a hundred girls living in the Pruitt-Igoe housing project in St. Louis. ...
If tomorrow is Thursday, then the day after tomorrow will be Saturday.
Let's get together tomorrow.
Tomorrow might not be as we thought. Who knows, we might die Tomorrow!
tomorrow the phantom will
If tomorrow is Sunday, then today is Saturday. Therefore, yesterday was Friday.
That is the correct spelling of "tomorrow."
Tomorrows.
That depends on whether you mean 'The dreams of tomorrow' or 'The dreams of tomorrows', and only you can know that. The former construction is much more likely to be what you mean, but I suppose you could be thinking of something like 'the dreams of all our tomorrows'. Writing it as 'all our tomorrows' dreams' would be technically correct but clumsy and ambiguous and, I think, best avoided.
Yes. This document is for tomorrow's meeting. The meeting belongs to tomorrow.
Yes. This document is for tomorrow's meeting. The meeting belongs to tomorrow.
Yes there should be an apostrophe. Tomorrow's answers today.
The word tomorrows is a common plural noun. It requires no apostrophe.A life typically has many tomorrows.If the word tomorrows has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.Tomorrow's class schedule had changed.I already finished tomorrow's reading assignment.
The title or tag "IT Solutions For Tomorrows Technical Challenges" needs an apostrophe on Tomorrow. In this sentence. Tomorrow owns or has possession over "Technical Challenges", making it become a singular possessive. So the title or tag should read "IT Solutions For Tomorrow's Technical Challenges".
Today would be yesterday.
'one today is worth two tomorrow' was written by 'Benjamin Franklin'
Yes. Today is today. In one day's time it will be tomorrow. In two day's time it will be the day after tomorrow. On that day, our present 'tomorrow' will be that day's yesterday.
The phrase is "Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday." It reminds us to focus on the present moment rather than worrying about the future or dwelling on the past.