I must go to (senior) high school tomorrow
je dois ... means I have to ..., I must ....
You would say "nous verrons demain" in French to mean "we will see tomorrow."
Desmene. In feudalism, all the land and property attached (but not necessarily continguous to) to a manor. A feudal lord holds his lands "in desmene."
"Qu'hier que demain" is not a standard phrase in French. It does not have a clear meaning and seems to be a combination of words that does not form a coherent sentence.
You would say "Je dois étudier" in French to mean "I must study."
je dois aller (quelque part) maintenant : I must go (somewhere) nowje dois m'en aller maintenant: I have to leave now, I must go now
Depends if you mean "I'm outta here!" or "Where's the washroom?" "I'm outta here!" Je dois y aller /or/ je dois m'en aller "Where's the washroom" où sont les toilettes, je dois aller aux toilettes.
She's not going to Spain tomorrow.
je dois means i have
Et demain means 'and tomorrow'
I suppose the exact sentence isJe dois y aller, au revoir, prends soin de toiwhich means: I must go now, bye, take care
"Pour l'examen demain" means "for the test/exam tomorrow"
Tomorrow (demain) and (et) for (pour) forever (toujours)
tu dois ... means 'you must / you have to ...' or 'you owe ...' when speaking about money.
- À demain! = See you tomorrow! (it's an expression) - demain = tomorrow - "à" doesn't mean "see you" in other case. It's a preposition.
"demain c'est le premier" : "tomorroy is the 1th"
je dois ... means I have to ..., I must ....