31 and 1/2 hours
The adverb tomorrow means occurring 'the day after the current day' and answers the question "when" although it is a future time. If an action is set to occur tomorrow, it should happen then, rather than today. *The word tomorrow is a noun if it is not modifying an action or condition verb.
If your birthday is between 1 January and 27 January (today) then you were born in 1986. If your birthday is between 28 January and 31 December then you were born in 1985. Tomorrow or some time later this year you will have your 25th birthday.
About 4 months.
Elapsed time refers to the time that passes between two events.
18hours 45minutes
18.5 hours
31 and 1/2 hours
31 and 1/2 hours
anything taking place tomorrow Tomorrow is the name given to the day after today and 'after tomorrow' is any time further into the future than today, which would include tomorrow but also all the days after it.
"I have no Yesterdays, Time took them away, Tomorrow may not be-- But I have Today." --by Pearl Yeadon McGinnis
"Tomorrow" can be a pronoun (of the indefinite type) or an adverb (of time). Example as a pronoun: "Tomorrow is a bank holiday." Example as an adverb: "I do not have time today but will take you shopping tomorrow."
Yes. Today is today. In one day's time it will be tomorrow. In two day's time it will be the day after tomorrow. On that day, our present 'tomorrow' will be that day's yesterday.
"Tomorrow" refers to the day following today, in relation to time. It is the day that comes after the current day.
now. then. today. tomorrow. tonight. yesterday. I think good luck
Today If this is Wednesday, then on Tuesday, Wednesday was 'tomorrow', and on Thursday it will be 'yesterday'.
Tomorrow. As long as we're in today, which is a given according to the question, it will still be called tomorrow. The day of the week and the date of the year will vary, but it will always be tomorrow. ... Well, at least as long as there is time. After that it might be "now" or "eternity" or whatever... but since it is really hard to imagine life without time, we can just go with "tomorrow."