If you are in Sydney Australia, then it is 3:00 pm today!
It is at least 250 to 300 degrease
"Tomorrow" refers to the day following today, in relation to time. It is the day that comes after the current day.
There was a day 23 years ago that people of that time called "today". But it wasn't the same "today" that you and I know. It was a different day. Today, it's always "today". But yesterday, today was tomorrow.
Today is never a good day to die. There is never a good day to die and everyone dies when their time comes.
$300/day in Dallas. $100/day in most surrounding citys
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.
You can use "today" as a noun in a sentence like this: "Today is the perfect day to start a new project." In this example, "today" refers to the current day as a specific time period. Another example could be, "I have a lot of tasks to complete today." Here, it emphasizes the day as a unit of time for activities.
In March it "springs froward" so the time would be 400 or 4 am
300 Turkish liras = 202.2 US dollars today (Nov 07, 2009)
Yes, certainly. 'Today is the first day of the rest of your life.'
No, "today" is not a preposition; it is an adverb used to refer to the current day or time.
As the day progresses, they'll have all of the usual 24 hours in the day.