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rajandelman.bsky.social
•
85 days ago
Kindergartener called two days from now "next tomorrow"
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[–]
jailerkey.bsky.social
•
85 days ago
Genius
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[–]
bisky-is-trans.bsky.social
•
84 days ago
NEXTMORROW
OMG
this is the chronology breakthrough I didn’t know I needed 😂
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martinfff.bsky.social
•
84 days ago
but that's totomorrow
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crab3.bsky.social
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84 days ago
I just found out recently that there is an actual word for this: aftermorrow. I only use this now. You’re welcome
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[–]
stevepaulo.net
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85 days ago
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racoon-dog.bsky.social
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85 days ago
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cheryl-blue.bsky.social
•
84 days ago
In Romanian the day after tomorrow is poimâine ("then tomorrow", I think) and the day before yesterday is alaltăieri (maybe "other yesterday"?). The English language is sometimes rather lacking.
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eileenwhitener.bsky.social
•
84 days ago
I taught my kid the word "overmorrow," and he finds it so useful.
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jamesmcorlett.bsky.social
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84 days ago
Personally I'd go with "threemorrow"
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rvanreekum.bsky.social
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84 days ago
my young one once called a scale a 'push clock'. i couldn't disagree there.
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genpoe.bsky.social
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84 days ago
small children's language use is honestly the most brilliant
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slightlysalty.bsky.social
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85 days ago
My son would always ask “is today tomorrow”?
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imacopyouidiot.bsky.social
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84 days ago
My daughter use to call last night, “yesternight”
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stephenspower.bsky.social
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85 days ago
I think the English word is Overmorrow.
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travisbean.bsky.social
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85 days ago
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ixak.bsky.social
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84 days ago
My son uses the term "tomorrow tomorrow."
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nearzone.bsky.social
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84 days ago
Common among my Nigerian family
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myleslobdell.bsky.social
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84 days ago
Try the French surlendemain.
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missedith.bsky.social
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84 days ago
I used to babysit for a girl who would say “yesterdays yesterday” and variations.
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ronmfoster.bsky.social
•
84 days ago
Japanese has both 明後日 (asatte), meaning “the day after tomorrow”, and 一昨日 (ototoi), meaning “the before yesterday”.
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OMG
this is the chronology breakthrough I didn’t know I needed 😂