time - Antonym/Opposite of "on the morrow"


If my birthday is on the 15th August and I tidy up on August 16th I can say: "I threw a huge party and tidied up on the morrow.". But if I prepared for the party on August 12th then what do I say? "I threw a huge party which I prepared on the ......". I don't want to use "the day before". Is there another more eloquent word/phrase? Some thoughts:on the yesterday, yestern, ereyesterday.




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

etymology - Since when has "a hot minute" meant a long time?

etymology - Origin of "s--t eating grin"

usage - "there doesn't seem" vs. "there don't seem"

First floor vs ground floor, usage origin

meaning - What is synonyme of "scale"?

punctuation - Is "et al" always accompanied by a period?

grammatical number - "My wide range of abilities have/has helped"