terminology - Is there a one-word English term for the day after tomorrow?





How obsolete is the word “overmorrow”?



Is there a one-word English term for the day after tomorrow? Perhaps a term that has fallen out of modern English usage.


One that would complete the sequence of: today, tomorrow, ...



Answer



No.


There may have been one, or more, and there may still be dialectal variants around here and there. But there's no general word; instead there's a fixed phrase, which you used: the day after tomorrow.


Germanic languages can use the word for morning to refer to the next daybreak. In German Morgen still means both morning and tomorrow; in English morrow, a variant of morning, came to be used in the latter sense. The to- is probably a fossilized definite article.


In German, with its transparent morphology, there is a word Übermorgen that means the day after tomorrow, but English is morphologically naked. If there were such a word, it would be overmorrow.


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