Sunny today and cloudy tomorrow.
The sentence "It's going to be sunny tomorrow" is correct because it is a statement about the weather conditions predicted for the next day. It is a simple and clear way to convey this information.
Whatever happens tomorrow will someday be in your past.
Example sentence - Today and tomorrow will be sunny and warm.
The word tomorrow is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; for example: Tomorrow is supposed to be sunny.
75F and sunny check www.weather.com
What the :( it going to be snowing tomorrow!
sunny a little bit of rain and all weekend might be a rainly but most of the time sunny with a high chance snow
It will snow tomorrow in northeastern Texas. Check with your local national weather service office (weather.gov) for details specific to your town.
The adverb is 'tomorrow' because it is describing the verb phrase, 'are going' (are going when?).
Yes, the question "Where are you going tomorrow?" is correct grammatically.
it's meant to be sunny spells with a little bit of icy