의미:
tomorrow
to·mor·row〔təmɔːrou, -már-│-mɔr-〕
ad. ,
n. [U] 내일, 명일(cf. TODAY); (가까운) 장래, 미래
▶ Korea’s tomorrow 한국의 장래
▶ I’m starting tomorrow. 내일 떠날 예정이다.
▶ People tomorrow will think differently. 장래의 사람들은 달리 생각할 것이다.
▶ See you tomorrow. 내일 또 (만납시다).
▶ Tomorrow is[will be] Sunday. 내일은 일요일이다. ★
to-morrow라고도 씀.
like[
as if]
there's no tomorrow 《속어》 내일 따위는 없는 것처럼; 장래를 전혀 생각지 않고
the day after tomorrow ⇒ day.
Tomorrow is another day. 《속담》 내일이 또 있다. 《오늘이 끝이 아니니까 낙심하지 마라》
tomorrow morning[
afternoon, night] 내일 아침[오후, 밤]
Tomorrow never comes. 《속담》 내일이란 결코 오지 않는다. 《오늘 해야 할 일은 오늘 하라》
tomorrow week 내주의 내일
here today and gone tomorrow 관용구
there's no tomorrow
"we have to win today; if we lose, we are out; do or die" The Bruins will be eliminated if they lose tonight. There's no tomorrow.
Never put off till tomorrow what can be done today
Don't postpone something you can do now.
One today is worth two tomorrow.
What you have today is better than what is promised or hoped for.
Feast today, famine tomorrow
If you indulge yourself with all that you have today, you may have to go without tomorrow.
Here today, gone tomorrow
Money, happiness and other desirable things are often here today, gone tomorrow, which means that they don't last for very long.
Jam tomorrow
(UK) This idiom is used when people promise good things for the future that will never come.
Like there's no tomorrow
If you do something like there's no tomorrow, you do it fast or energetically.
Tomorrow's another day
This means that things might turn out better or that there might be another opportunity in the future.
never put off until tomorrow
never put off until tomorrow see under
put off.
tomorrow
tomorrow In addition to the idiom beginning with
tomorrow, also see
here today, gone tomorrow;
put off.
here today, (and) gone tomorrow
Said of article that is short-lived. I can't accept I've already spent the money I got for my birthday. Here today, gone tomorrow!Learn more: gone, here, tomorrowhere today and gone tomorrow
Describing an abrupt phenomenon, a casual fancy, a fad. Originally this announcement referred to the almost abrupt amount of a animal life. It was recorded by abundant writers and was included in James Kelly’s Scottish Proverbs of 1721. By the nineteenth aeon it had become a beneath austere thought. T. C. Haliburton (Sam Slick) included it in Wise Saws (1843): “I am a bird of passage—here today and gone tomorrow.” Learn more: and, gone, here, today, tomorrow