overmorrow
English
Etymology
From Middle English overmorwe, a compound of over + morwe (“morrow”). Compare Dutch overmorgen, German übermorgen, Swedish övermorgon, Danish overmorgen, Norwegian overmorgen (also overimorgen).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɒɹəʊ
Adverb
overmorrow (not comparable)
- (archaic) On the day after tomorrow.
- 1535, Coverdale, Myles, The Byble, that is, the Holy Scrypture of the Olde and New Teſtament, faythfully tranſlated into Englyſhe, Tobit 8:4, page D.iiij:
- Thē ſpake Tobias unto the virgin, and ſayde: Up Sara, let us make oure prayer unto God to daye, tomorow, and ouermorow: for theſe thre nightes wil we reconcyle oure ſelues with God: and whan the thirde holy night is paſt, we ſhall ioyne together in ye deutye of mariage.
- Then spake Tobias unto the virgin, and said: Up Sara, let us make our prayer unto God today, tomorrow, and overmorrow: for these three nights will we reconcile ourselves with God, and when the third holy night is past, we shall join together in the duty of marriage.
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Antonyms
- (obsolete) ereyesterday
Translations
on the day after tomorrow — see day after tomorrow
Noun
overmorrow (uncountable)
- (archaic) The day after tomorrow.
- 1898, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The first part of the tragedy of Faust, Longmans, Green and Co., page 197:
- My prescient limbs already borrow
From rare Walpurgis-night a glow :
It comes round on the overmorrow [transl. übermorgen] —
Then why we are awake we know.
-
Antonyms
- (obsolete) ereyesterday
Translations
day after tomorrow — see day after tomorrow
References
- overmorrow in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
See also
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