Ich bin in meine Heimat gehen morgen
Tomorrow in German is morgen.
Morgen
"Wirst du morgen skaten gehen?" or "Gehst du morgen skaten?"
Ich werde Sie/Dich morgen anrufen.orIch rufe Sie/Dich morgen an
You have to be more specific but in ojibwa it is "waaban"
I am sorry to say but i ned to no the answer before tomorrow, tomorrow is the due date for the project so i need the answer now
In French you say: "pas d'ecole demain" (no school tomorrow) or "je n'ai pas d'ecole demain" meaning I have no school tomorrow. In Spanish you can say: "no voy a la escuela manana" meaning i am not going to school tomorrow.
Tomorrow night translates as morgen Abend
Hair today gone tomorrow
Yes. "Hasta manyana" literally means "until tomorrow", so it is the exact equivalent of "See you tomorrow", which makes sense to say if you plan to see this person tomorrow.However, any parting remark is really interchangeable. For example, in English, you could say "See you tomorrow" even if you are not going to see that person tomorrow or you could say "See you later" even if you are not going to see that person later in the day.
"good Eten" Native speaker of Low German/Low Saxon.
Ich werde im Büro von morgen is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.