To say "tomorrow" in Japanese, one could say 明日 / あした / あす (ashita / asu) or less commonly みょうにち (myounichi).
"Asu" is a Japanese phrase and in English it means "Tomorrow"
Tomorrow comes and we have to say goodbye
Do you mean ashi? There is no 'si' sound in Japanese. 足 (ashi) can be translated as foot or leg.
Oddly enough, Asuna can mean "tomorrow vegetables". See Sources and Related Links for more information.
Mañana has two meanings. It can either mean "tomorrow" or it can also mean "morning."
Ashita.
'Ashita ha kekkonshiki'
"tomorrow, miss"
Japanese 542
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.
- À demain! = See you tomorrow! (it's an expression) - demain = tomorrow - "à" doesn't mean "see you" in other case. It's a preposition.
If you have things to do tomorrow then why not do it today