tomorrow

Etymology
From, , from , from +  (dative of ), from , perhaps from , equivalent to.

Adverb

 * 1) On the day after the present day.
 * 2) At some point in the future; later on
 * 3)  On next (period of time other than a day, such as a week or a month), following the present (period of time).
 * 4) * 1664 March 28, debate in Great Britain's House of Commons, printed in 1803 in the Journals of the House of Commons, page 538:
 * Resolved, &c. That the House be Called over again on Tomorrow Month, being the Six-and-twentieth Day of April next.
 * 1)  On the next day (following some date in the past).
 * 2) * 1717 October 8, Robert Wodrow, in a letter to Mr. James Hart, printed in 1828, Robert Wodrow, The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland, page xxii:
 * To prevent this, a committee for peace was proposed for to-morrow, who heard the ministers and Mr. Anderson upon the heads of the affair, but in vain; when their complaint was given in in Synod, and referred to the next Synod
 * 1)  On the next day (following some date in the past).
 * 2) * 1717 October 8, Robert Wodrow, in a letter to Mr. James Hart, printed in 1828, Robert Wodrow, The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland, page xxii:
 * To prevent this, a committee for peace was proposed for to-morrow, who heard the ministers and Mr. Anderson upon the heads of the affair, but in vain; when their complaint was given in in Synod, and referred to the next Synod
 * To prevent this, a committee for peace was proposed for to-morrow, who heard the ministers and Mr. Anderson upon the heads of the affair, but in vain; when their complaint was given in in Synod, and referred to the next Synod

Noun

 * 1)  The day after the present day.
 * 2)  A future period or time.
 * 1)  A future period or time.
 * 1)  A future period or time.
 * 1)  A future period or time.