Tomorrows.
If it answers the question "when" for an action verb ("I will leave tomorrow"), it is an adverb. It can also be a noun ("Tomorrow is another day").
You can use "tomorrow" as an adverb to indicate when an action will take place. For example, you might say, "I will submit my report tomorrow." In this sentence, "tomorrow" modifies the verb "submit," specifying the time of the action.
Singular ; crate Plural ; crates
Plural
The plural is fats.
That is the correct spelling of "tomorrow."
The noun 'sky' is a count noun; the plural noun is skies.Examples:A flock of geese flew across the sky. (singular)The weather report is for sunny skies tomorrow. (plural)
The word tomorrows is a common plural noun. It requires no apostrophe.A life typically has many tomorrows.If the word tomorrows has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.Tomorrow's class schedule had changed.I already finished tomorrow's reading assignment.
You should write daughter's if you are talking about one daughter, e.g. "it is my daughter's birthday tomorrow".You should write daughters' if you are talking about more than one daughter at the same time, e.g. "this is our daughters' bedroom, which they share".
"Ready for tomorrow" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase pronti per domani. The masculine plural adjective and prepositional phrase also translate into English as "done (prepared) for tomorrow." The pronunciation will be "PRON-tee per do-MA-nee" in Italian.
If tomorrow is Thursday, then the day after tomorrow will be Saturday.
Tomorrow - Tomorrow album - was created in 1968-02.
For example you can say: Do all of you guys want to go to the movies tomorrow? or something like that. Try to use your common sense to tell you if it sounds right or not
'Que va usted/vas....' (+ verb-infinitive) = 'What are you (formal/informal singular) going (+ verb-infinitive, i.e. 'to....) e.g. 'Que va usted/vas traer manana?' = What are you going to wear tomorrow? Plurals are: 'Que van ustedes....' (formal plural) 'Qus vais....' (informal plural).
- À demain! = See you tomorrow! (it's an expression) - demain = tomorrow - "à" doesn't mean "see you" in other case. It's a preposition.
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No, tomorrow is a adverb.