"Day yesterday" is redundant and grammatically incorrect. The correct phrase would be "yesterday" to refer to the day before today.
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.
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.
Rembering what you had for lunch yesterday
"Don't sweat it" was a slang expression in the 1950s that meant "not to worry."
Very subjective question, but I'll give it a go... How about this: Yesterday, today and forever, some things will never change.
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
The correct form is What day was yesterday because yesterday implies past tense.
yesterday in French: hier the day before yesterday: avant-hier
Friday! (tomorrow)
day beforer yesterday
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.
If someone said 'I was tired all day yesterday" it means that all during the day yesterday, they were tired.
Yesterday is the day before today.
yesterday
Yesterday was the day before today.
Sure! "Today too" can be used to refer to something that is continuing from a previous day or time, emphasizing that the same situation or action is happening on the current day as well. For example, "It rained yesterday, and today too."
Tomorrow.