pants and long sleeve might be enough or a short sleeve and light jacket
Tomorrow is adverb. Example: I have to go to school tomorrow. In this sentence, you are modifying the verb go (going when? -- tomorrow). Tomorrow can be a noun, as well. Example: Tomorrow should be warmer.
What the :( it going to be snowing tomorrow!
The adverb is 'tomorrow' because it is describing the verb phrase, 'are going' (are going when?).
Well I am going tomorrow and I am going to wear wellies, I don't particularly want to get wet/sandy feet and I don't want my toes trodden on lol
Yes, the question "Where are you going tomorrow?" is correct grammatically.
A singular verb should come after the words "One of your sisters", since the word "one" is singular. For example, "One of your sisters is going to visit me tomorrow", not "One of your sisters are going to visit me tomorrow".
The adverb in the sentence "you are going fishing tomorrow" is "tomorrow." Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, providing information about when, where, how, or to what extent an action is taking place. In this sentence, "tomorrow" modifies the verb "are going," indicating the specific time when the action will occur.
yes
Mexico us going to play with Venezuela tomorrow at 10:00pm
No
No.
Yes. Tomorrow, somewhere in the world, it will be raining.