ChatterBank3 mins ago
what does "in the morning" mean?
4 Answers
is it safe for someone to assume that "in the morning" means the following morning after the present day? If I say "i will see you in the morning", or "they are shutting the water off in the morning" is it acceptable for someone to assume that i am talking about the following morning after the present day? Is it acceptable for me to use that phrase as a meaning for the following morning after the present day?
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Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Unless you have already mentioned some day OTHER than the following one, 'in the morning' always means TOMORROW morning. Of course, if you have already spoken about 'today', ' last Tuesday', 'next Wednesday' or some other given day, past or future, you mean the morning of that particular already-mentioned day.
You might, therefore, say, 'I was in London last Tuesday. I went up by train in the morning.' Alternatively, you might say, 'We're visiting Susan next Wednesday. We're planning on driving over in the morning.'
You might, therefore, say, 'I was in London last Tuesday. I went up by train in the morning.' Alternatively, you might say, 'We're visiting Susan next Wednesday. We're planning on driving over in the morning.'
If I say NOW "I'll see you in the morning" (and it's 7 am now) then I would mean tomorrow morning. If I am seeing someone later today I'd say, "see you later this morning" - but Sunday and later mornings are not yet in this conversation. "In the morning" to me definitely means "the morning after tonight".