Yes, "tomorrow" can be considered a subject in a sentence. It refers to the day after the current one and can act as the main focus of a statement or question. For example, in the sentence "Tomorrow is a holiday," "tomorrow" serves as the subject.
The complete subject is "Tomorrow you and I."
In the sentence "tomorrow is a mystery," 'tomorrow' is a noun functioning as the subject of the sentence.
'Is until tomorrow' is a fragment, because it has no real subject. You can make it a sentence: What Is until tomorrow?
meeting
Yes, that is a correct sentence: subject = tomorrow verb = is direct object = Friday
M. Barnard Eldershaw has written: 'Tomorrow and tomorrow' 'Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow' -- subject(s): Protected DAISY 'M Barnard Eldershaw (UQP Australian Authors)' 'Essays in Australian fiction' -- subject(s): Australian fiction, In literature, History and criticism 'A House Is Built' -- subject(s): Fiction 'Essays in Australian fiction' -- subject(s): Australian fiction, History and criticism 'Plaque with laurel'
Yes, saying "tomorrow is Tuesday" is grammatically correct as it follows the standard structure of subject (tomorrow) + verb (is) + object (Tuesday).
In the sentence "Who can tell what will happen tomorrow," the predicate is "can tell what will happen tomorrow." The predicate includes the verb "can tell" and describes the action or state of being related to the subject "who." It specifies what the subject is capable of doing regarding future events.
Class is subject; begins is predicate
'Tomorrow' is a noun, so it is none of those; nouns are not subject to tense like verbs are.
A Year toward Tomorrow won the Oscar for Documentary - Short Subject - in 1966.
In the sentence "Tomorrow you and I will go to the creek," the predicate is "will go to the creek." It describes the action that the subject ("you and I") will perform. The word "tomorrow" serves as an adverbial modifier of time, providing context for when the action will take place.