I think that you have to know the words "you" and "me" before you are qualified to use this site. "Tomorrow" is pretty basic, too. It means the next day after today.
"You" typically refers to the person being addressed, "me" refers to the speaker, and "tomorrow" is the day after today.
"Espana mañana" translates to "Spain tomorrow" in English.
Apopo in Maori means "tomorrow" or "the following day." It refers to the day after the current day.
"Que vas a hacer mañana" means "What are you going to do tomorrow?" in Spanish.
It means "See you tomorrow, my friend" in Spanish.
You would say "nous verrons demain" in French to mean "we will see tomorrow."
Mañana has two meanings. It can either mean "tomorrow" or it can also mean "morning."
"tomorrow, miss"
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.
It means "morning" or "tomorrow"
If you have things to do tomorrow then why not do it today
- À demain! = See you tomorrow! (it's an expression) - demain = tomorrow - "à" doesn't mean "see you" in other case. It's a preposition.
Do you work tomorrow Trabajas mañana
Tomorrow is....
"Tomorrow is...."
tomorrow
It means tomorrow. :)
tomorrow