@[email protected] to Ask [email protected] • 2 days agoYou can add one word to the vocabulary / general use, what would it be?message-square52fedilinkarrow-up152file-text
arrow-up152message-squareYou can add one word to the vocabulary / general use, what would it be?@[email protected] to Ask [email protected] • 2 days agomessage-square52fedilinkfile-text
Any explanation / meaning / backstory is more than welcome, or you can just drop it for everyone to try and resolve.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink45•1 day agoOvermorrow. I hate saying the day after tomorrow like some peasant.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink4•24 hours agoIt is an official word, but nobody uses it anymore in English. Same goes for ereyesterday (the day before yesterday)
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink19•edit-21 day agoWe already have that in German! Morgen and Übermorgen (Über- = over-)
minus-squareMentalEdgelinkfedilink5•1 day agoSame in finnish. “Ylihuomenna” where “yli” means over and the rest is tomorrow.
minus-squareNoneOfUrBusinesslinkfedilink8•1 day agoY’all should bring it back to common use and rejoin the civilized world by overmorrow evening.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish2•1 day agoI feel we should simplify that even further by saying undermorrow.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•2 hours ago…to mean “today”? (as in, the day before tomorrow)
Overmorrow.
I hate saying the day after tomorrow like some peasant.
It is an official word, but nobody uses it anymore in English. Same goes for ereyesterday (the day before yesterday)
Well, we can fix that.
We already have that in German! Morgen and Übermorgen (Über- = over-)
Same in Danish, overmorgen
The even better morgen, the übermorgen ^^
Same in finnish. “Ylihuomenna” where “yli” means over and the rest is tomorrow.
Y’all should bring it back to common use and rejoin the civilized world by overmorrow evening.
I feel we should simplify that even further by saying undermorrow.
…to mean “today”? (as in, the day before tomorrow)