《Hurry Up Tomorrow》如以主流流行工业专辑的视角来看的确精致有余却不那么平衡,但足够的另类色彩浸润之间,反而让人感受到《Hurry Up Tomorrow》实在是“Weeknd”最贴近于“Abel Tesfaye”的一刻。 In other words, is it correct from the point of view of. I know there's a fixed phrase the day after tomorrow
But is it possible to omit the second tomorrow in the following sentence Is it the same to saying i will leave / am leaving / am going to leave, if we lack the context We won't be meeting tomorrow and the day after [tomorrow].
I will meet tom the day after tomorrow Is there a word in english for the day after tomorrow I've heard someone saying on facebook that it is called overmorrow Tomorrow morning is idiomatic english, tomorrow's morning isn't
So there is no pattern to whether or not you use an apostrophe. When you say, can you do it by tomorrow? sets tomorrow as the deadline for completing the task It emphasizes that the action needs to be finished no later than tomorrow The choice between for and by depends on the specific context and what you want to convey
Thanks but as you said the pattern you’re looking for with regard to placement doesn’t depend on whether the subject is a pronoun, proper name, or any other substantive It’s entirely to do with the particular word who if that is the case can we say who will be she in future Or who will be sara in future (as in what she will become professionally)
Hi, i've got a question about ways of expressing future in english Let's have a look at three examples (1) i will buy a new computer tomorrow (2) i'm going to buy a new computer tomorrow (3) i'm buying a new computer tomorrow
The final results of the experiment are due by tomorrow Why doesn't the first one make sense to you, parla I wonder how the second one is okay but the first one not In the sentence about the experiment, due is used in the same sense as your report is due to your department head by friday
Something must be completed by a particular day. My question is about a specific sentence in an exam Is it correct to say i will be leaving the office at 5 tomorrow