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Tomorrow,_Tom :: Tomorrow_Never_Dies :: Tomorrow_People,_The
 

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Tomorrow is the day after today; it is in the near future. In everyday speech tomorrow speaks not only of a single day but of some era that is not today and has not yet occurred.

In popular culture the vision of the abstract tomorrow can be a positive one: "I'll get around to it tomorrow," "my ship will come in tomorrow," "the sun will come out tomorrow." There can be negative emotions attached to tomorrow as well, perhaps related to future justice, judgement or revenge. One implication of tomorrow is that an opportunity for change, action, redemption still remains; that the seemingly endless cycle of time will continue.

The literal tomorrow is usually not so romanticized. "The rent is due tomorrow;" "Tomorrow is my last day on the job" - but whether a specific use of the word is to be understood as literal or abstract is not always clear.

Yesterday's tomorrow is simply today, and the day before yesterday's tomorrow is yesterday's today. Tomorrow's tomorrow is today's day after tomorrow, and today's tomorrow is tomorrow's today.

References in culture


Songs and literature make great use of the obvious issue that the abstract tomorrow never comes. When the day after today arrives, then that day becomes today. Likewise the imminency of death (or other undesired events) gets quite a bit of play: "We may as well eat and drink, for tomorrow we die." (Isaiah 22:13; Luke 12:19-20) According to many Holocaust survivors, saying "tomorrow" in one of the concentration camps was a slang term for "never."

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Domani | Tomorrow | Morgen (de volgende dag) | Tomorrow | Jutri

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Tomorrow".

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