Nothing - the correct phrase is "like there was no tomorrow" and it makes perfect sense as it is, so it's not an idiom. If there was not going to be a tomorrow, you'd try to get as much done today as you possibly could.
Yes it can. E.g there may be a probability it may rain tomorrow. See, negative. Negative probability is like an opinion of your own except probabilities aren't opinions, anyway you get what I mean.
borrow from a friend, parents, grandparent, tell them you will pay them back, and mean it
good enough, would have worked, would have been sufficient
There needs to be a location as well as a time interval. A statement such as "there is a 40% chance that it will rain in Yourtown over the 12 hours starting at sunrise tomorrow" means that if you consider a whole lot of days like tomorrow - with the same sort of weather as you experienced over the last few days - then in 4 days out of 10 (40%), it will rain tomorrow. Just to complicate matters, the statement does not distinguish between there being a 40% probability that it will rain non-stop or that it will rain briefly.
mean 8% alcohol bruh.. why not add the 00's? worked for bond~
Live like theres no tomorrow
Looks like "tomorrow" to me.
Looks like "tomorrow" to me.
- À demain! = See you tomorrow! (it's an expression) - demain = tomorrow - "à" doesn't mean "see you" in other case. It's a preposition.
U worked hard
If you mean it like "see you tomorrow," use à demain. If it's part of a sentence like "I'll be here until tomorrow," use jusqu'à demain.
Mañana has two meanings. It can either mean "tomorrow" or it can also mean "morning."
It's something like 'I'll see you tomorrow'
he slapped somebody real hard like theres no tomorrow
"tomorrow, miss"
Henry David Thoreau was a famous American author. He said that people live meanly like ants meaning that they don't think about others.
Tomorrow. And I don't mean December 3rd. I mean tomorrow. When you wake up tomorrow, it will still be tomorrow. Get it? It will never happen, but people will be predicting it forever.