tomorn
English
Etymology
From Middle English tomorn, from Old English tōmorgen (“tomorrow”), equivalent to to- + morn. More at tomorrow.
Adverb
tomorn (not comparable)
- (obsolete) tomorrow
- (dialectal) in the morning
Anagrams
- Morton
Middle English
Alternative forms
- tomorne, tomorgen, tomorȝen, tomoregan, tomoroune, tomoroun, tomoreuin, tomorwen, tomorwin, tomorwyn, tomorewen, tomarȝan, tomarȝen, tomærȝen, tomarhen, tomarwen, tomarewene, temarwen
Etymology
From Old English tōmorgen, tō morgenne (“tomorrow”), from tō (“at, on”) + morgene, mergen (dative of morgen (“morning”)), from Proto-Germanic *murganaz (“morning”), perhaps, from Proto-Indo-European *mergʰ- (“to blink, to twinkle”).
Adverb
tomorn
- On the day after today; tomorrow.
Noun
tomorn (uncountable)
- The day after today; tomorrow.
- Some time in the future.
Adjective
tomorn
- Belonging to the day after today; tomorrow's.
Synonyms
- (adverb and noun): tomorwe
Descendants
- English: tomorn
References
- “tomorn, (adv.)” in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 13 April 2018.