Latin doesn't have a proper word for future, you have to say something like time to come tempus posterum.
By the time you get to medieval Latin the term futurusstarts to appear as the adjective future:
Hic Jacet Arthurus Rex Quondam Rexque Futurus
Here lies Arthur, the once and future king.
In medieval times you even sometimes see futurum as the noun 'the future'.
But tempus posterum is more natural.
Usually 'tomorrow is (my/your/his/her/our/their) day off'.
cras
"Malae diem" I belive (Malae = Bad, Diem = Day)
In Latin, you can say "Diei benedictus esto" to wish someone a blessed day. This phrase translates to "Be blessed on this day" in English. Latin is a highly inflected language, so the word order can vary without changing the meaning significantly.
Hodie die bonum cadere est.
Usually 'tomorrow is (my/your/his/her/our/their) day off'.
To say "What is the day tomorrow?" in Maori, you would say "Ko te ra āpōpō?"
Hodie means today and coridie means yesterdayThe question is for "tomorrow," not "today" or "yesterday." The answer is cras.
To convey that "August 1st is the day after tomorrow," you would say, "August 1st falls on the day after tomorrow." If today is July 30th, for example, you can clarify by stating, "Since today is July 30th, August 1st is indeed the day after tomorrow."
An obsolete (no longer used) term is overmorrow. However, today, we just say "day after tomorrow".
Après-demain.
To say "have a nice day" in Latin, you can use the phrase "habeas diem bonam."
In Pig Latin, the word "daddy" would be "add-day."
Day After Tomorrow - Day After Tomorrow album - was created on 2002-08-07.
If tomorrow is Thursday, then the day after tomorrow will be Saturday.
Friday! (tomorrow)
Scarlett say tomorrow is another day