I. ˈmä(ˌ)rō, -_rə also ˈmȯ(ˌ)-; often -_rəw+V noun
( -s )
Etymology: Middle English morwe, morwen — more at morn
1. archaic : morning
I shall say good night till it be morrow — Shakespeare
2. : the next following day : the day after any day specified or understood
had expected to go back on the following morning, but instead it looked as if they were going to spend the morrow and a few other morrows in the trenches — Patrich McGill
told us that the task force would sortie on the morrow — F.J.Bell
3. : the time immediately after a specified event
on the morrow of their triumph, jealousy stepped in — Encyc. Americana
has made haste on the morrow of his subject's death to bring out this supplement — New Yorker
II. adjective
archaic : of or relating to the next day
a sadder and a wiser man he rose the morrow morn — S.T.Coleridge