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morrow

[ UK /mˈɒɹə‍ʊ/ ]
[ US /ˈmɑɹoʊ, ˈmɔɹoʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the next day
    whenever he arrives she leaves on the morrow

How To Use morrow In A Sentence

  • I'm feeling a bit edgy about the exam tomorrow.
  • A pause in lecturing, consequent upon our mid-year examinations having begun, has given me a little respite, and I am paying a three days 'visit upon an old friend here, meaning to leave for New York to-morrow, where I have a couple of lectures to give. Familiar Letters of William James II
  • Come now , don't get into a tantrum . You must beauty sleep for the photographer tomorrow.
  • Tomorrow, if I were lusting for cash and recognition and all the things people get into broadcasting for, I might decide talk radio was my easiest point of access.
  • You can boil some brown rice and leave to cool for tomorrow. The 8-Week Cholesterol Cure
  • I overheard two fifteen year old girls behind me at the ATM planning to get together tomorrow night and eat ice cream and comfort each other when they didn't get any valentines.
  • The snowstorm will last till tomorrow afternoon.
  • If we don't save the rich people today they might be extinct tomorrow just like the dinosaurs. * shedding a fake tear for the plight of the rich* knixphan Says: Think Progress
  • Erna Hart is going to swim across the English Channel tomorrow.
  • So return to him, O thou monk, and say that the single combat shall take place to morrow, for this day we have come off our journey and are aweary; but after rest neither reproach nor blame fear ye. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
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