I. adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
see you tomorrow/at three/Sunday etc
▪
See you Friday – your place at 8:30.
starting (from) now/tomorrow/next week etc
▪
You have two hours to complete the test, starting now.
the day after tomorrow
▪
How about meeting for lunch the day after tomorrow?
tomorrow afternoon
▪
What are you doing tomorrow afternoon?
tomorrow evening
▪
Would you like to come over tomorrow evening?
tomorrow morning
▪
Can you have the report ready by tomorrow morning?
tomorrow night
▪
I should be back by tomorrow night.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
leave
▪
He is leaving tomorrow , and I have parted them with my selfishness and my love.
▪
One should do this in March, but you're leaving tomorrow so I guess September is fine.
▪
By nightfall I am fed up with the search and determined to leave tomorrow for at least one day on Drangajökull.
▪
Similar impressions seem to arise from sentences such as I may leave tomorrow and I can finish it next week.
start
▪
Do not adjust your set Pam Francis Four new stations start tomorrow , but will anyone tell the difference?
▪
Glendenen will be named in the squad for the match against Derbyshire at Chesterfield, starting tomorrow .
▪
He accepted at once and was almost ready to start tomorrow .
▪
Wolstenholme will have played the course many times when the tournament starts tomorrow .
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
jam tomorrow
▪
Jam yesterday, jam tomorrow but never jam today.
▪
If not culture jam today, then certainly culture jam tomorrow.
▪
Not for him the promise of jam tomorrow or a brave, new world waiting just around the next bank overdraft.
▪
Will it really be no jams tomorrow?
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
We're playing tennis tomorrow .
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
He must find him tomorrow and make sure he was all right.
▪
Miguel Rafaelo could fire her tomorrow .
▪
So it may be around today or tomorrow .
▪
The two sides will also be meeting again at the same venue tomorrow in the first round of the Augustus Barnet Cup.
II. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
work
▪
I can't guarantee it will be working tomorrow .
▪
Do you want to work tomorrow ?
▪
Yesterday we had one working motorbike, and tomorrow we will have one working motorbike.
▪
He wants me to go to work tomorrow .
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
The worker of tomorrow will need to be better educated.