In such questions we need to search for the starting point or the clue.
The clue in the question is the word "Yesterday" which is at the last.
So this is our starting point.
Now lets divide the sentence into 4 parts...
The day after/ the day before/ the day after yesterday
So coming from back....the day after yesterday= today
then continuing it....the day before( today)....is yesterday...
The day after (yesterday)...is today...
Or
After dividing we find day after , day before as cancellation pair...and we are left with the day after yesterday......answer is Today.
"Day yesterday" is redundant and grammatically incorrect. The correct phrase would be "yesterday" to refer to the day before today.
The day must be Thursday because "the day after tomorrow" means two days into the future and two days before Sunday is Friday. that means that yesterday would have been Thursday.
Monday
Rembering what you had for lunch yesterday
Very subjective question, but I'll give it a go... How about this: Yesterday, today and forever, some things will never change.
yesterday in French: hier the day before yesterday: avant-hier
Tomorrow.
Let Yesterday=-1 Today=0 Tomorrow=1 the day after yesterday=(-1)+1=0=Today the day before the day after yesterday=(-1)+[(-1)+1]=(-1)=Yesterday !!! Answer = Yesterday
Yesterday is the day before today.
yesterday
Yesterday was the day before today.
If the day after the day before yesterday was Tuesday, then yesterday was Tuesday, making today Wednesday. Given that the day before the day after tomorrow is Thursday, it confirms that today is indeed Wednesday. Therefore, today is Wednesday.
If today is Friday, the day that comes before yesterday is Wednesday. The day that follows Wednesday is Thursday. Therefore, the day that follows the day that comes after the day that comes before the day before yesterday is Friday.
Yesterday = Ontem - The day before yesterday = Anteontem
Thursday
No, "last yesterday" would refer to the most recent occurrence of yesterday. The term for the day before yesterday is "two days ago."
The day before yesterday. I thnk.