Scarlett can't bear to think of it (losing Rhett) today so she would think of it tommorrow as she is fond of saying and plans to return to Tara (her home and safehaven before the war even began).
Yes it is her famous line in the movie Gone With the Wind! TRUST ME ON THAT!
yes there was once a dancer named "famous" hooks on american bandstand.
Neil Armstrong is a famous astronaut who landed on the moon.
Phoebe Price is an American actress and model. She is famous for her frequent red carpet appearance. She is from Alabama, and worked as a commercial model.
No, in the sentence (made famous by Scarlett O'Hara), the word "tomorrow's" is a contraction for the noun "tomorrow" and the verb "is". Example:Tomorrow is another day. Or, Tomorrow's another day.The possessive form of the noun tomorrow is spelled the same, tomorrow's, but its function is different. The possessive noun is used to show possession, purpose, or origin of the noun that follows it. Example:Tomorrow's meeting is at ten o'clock.
I cleaned my clothes for tomorrow morning. OR The messy clothes I was wearing drew attention to the famous crowd.
Geronimo is a famous Native American!
To help you, here is a famous quotation from Shakespeare: "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day." (Macbeth) Here is another one: "Call on me tomorrow, and you will find me a grave man." (Romeo and Juliet) Basically, "tomorrow" is "tomorrow"--not surprising really, since Elizabethan English is not a different language from our own.
The first one, and the one which made it a famous line is, of course, Gone with the Wind (1939). "After all, tomorrow is another day" is the movie's final line, spoken by Scarlet O'Hara.
Daniel Boone was a famous American trailblazer.
"Never leave that till tomorrow which you can do today." - Benjamin FranklinBenjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790) was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun but American should always be capitalized.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun but American should always be capitalized.
He will be famous sometime in his lifetime. Nobody knows when he will become famous. But he knows when he will be famous tomorrow.
No.
Marbury vs, Madison was a famous American legal case in 1803.