There are quite a few different ways to express 'what are you doing tomorrow?' in Japanese. Some of these are:
These are all very casual. A more polite option would be 明日ã¯何をã—ã¾ã™ã‹ (ashita wa nani o shimasu ka).
You may say 'mata ashita.'
matta konban
明日はひまですか? ashita ha hima desuka?
Ashita.
In French you say: "pas d'ecole demain" (no school tomorrow) or "je n'ai pas d'ecole demain" meaning I have no school tomorrow. In Spanish you can say: "no voy a la escuela manana" meaning i am not going to school tomorrow.
Usually 'tomorrow is (my/your/his/her/our/their) day off'.
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
To say "tomorrow" in Japanese, one could say 明日 / あした / あす (ashita / asu) or less commonly みょうにち (myounichi).
Wat doet u morgen?
Ogenki Desuka?
Tomorrow comes and we have to say goodbye
'Ashita ha tenki ga yokattara ii na.'
Ich werde Sie/Dich morgen anrufen.orIch rufe Sie/Dich morgen an
you can just say bai bai, or sayonnara, or matta ashita (till tomorrow)
tomorrow black eyed peas is doing something you not
明日はひまですか? ashita ha hima desuka?
Koe ha ho me'a e fai 'a pongipongi ! lol (there you go...)
Ashita.
"Dou desu ka?" would literally be "how are you doing?" or "how is it?"It is pronounced: doh dess kah.