What National day is August 1st?

What National day is August 1st?

National Girlfriends Day
On August 1st, National Girlfriends Day encourages women across the U.S. to get together and celebrate their special bond of friendship.

How was your day reply?

Think about how you reply when someone asks you “how was your day?”. More often than not, you probably respond with a “fine” or “not bad” or even a “can’t complain”. It’s similar to questions like “How are you?”, “How’s things?” or “Wassup?”.

What day is today correct grammar?

In “What day is today?” “today” is acting as a predicate nominative that completes a linking verb and renames the noun “day.” The answer is usually “Today is…” our anniversary, Independence Day, Friday.

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Is it correct to say Tomorrows?

Tomorrows (without the apostrophe) is not grammatically incorrect but it isn’t common in English. Tomorrows is the plural of tomorrow but tomorrow is usually singular (it is one day) Why is it Tomorrow’s meeting and not Tomorrows meeting?

Which is correct tomorrow will be Wednesday or tomorrow is Wednesday?

(hence) ‘tomorrow will be Wednesday’ is true today. Essentially: both are correct but common usage goes with ‘is’. “Tomorrow will be Wednesday” is understandable and perhaps not incorrect, but “Tomorrow is Wednesday” is much more common and grammatically better. The reason is that this is essentially a statement about the present.

What is the difference between Tomorrows and Tomorrows meeting?

The two words (tomorrow, meeting) are connected. Tomorrows (without the apostrophe) is not grammatically incorrect but it isn’t common in English. Tomorrows is the plural of tomorrow but tomorrow is usually singular (it is one day) Why is it Tomorrow’s meeting and not Tomorrows meeting?

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Why do we need the apostrophe in “tomorrows”?

We need the apostrophe s to show the possessive form. This means that the meeting belongs to tomorrow. The two words (tomorrow, meeting) are connected. Tomorrows (without the apostrophe) is not grammatically incorrect but it isn’t common in English.