Dictionary
morrow
verb
To dawn
Exact(37)
In Proust's Remembrance of Things Past, the narrator depicts the "powerful joy" that a tea-soaked madeleine awakes in him when he is "dispirited after a dreary day, with the prospect of a depressing morrow".
But in an environment like that, where minor personal errands can require a hefty bodyguard, and entrepreneurs are stymied by utter uncertainty about what the morrow will bring, it is crippling.Of course, we do not know how much corruption and uncertainty have increased in the days since Saddam.
It documents the British and American stockmarkets' tendency to feel the morrow only dimly, discounting future earnings more heavily than is rational.
GBN's members can attend conferences on big questions such the future of risk (to be held in Las Vegas in September); receive company briefings and newsletters; gain access to the company's computer network, where they can join online discussions on the topic of the day (or, it is hoped, the morrow).
The models are wrong because the morrow is never the same as yesterday.
It was his vision on the very morrow of Dunkirk that saw the forging of a future alliance, the new world stepping forth "with all its power and might " to the liberation of the old, the rallying of the world against tyranny, the long struggle and the final success.
Similar(23)
He wished that all the freemen of Liverpool were then present at that meeting; he would stay till twelve o'clock at night nay, he would stay till twelve o'clock to-morrow night to discuss with them all points connected with this great question; he wished he could have one shake of the hand with the whole body of the freemen of Liverpool.
The idea that investors should not lose more money than they put in is the foundation of the modern economy, but it struck Gilbert as absurd:As a Company you've come to utter sorrow But the Liquidators say, "Never mind you needn't pay," So you start another company to-morrow!The best musicals, happily, never go out of date.
Will she kiss me to-morrow?
Whereas Haussmann's approach was especially influential on the European continent and in the design of American civic centres, it was the utopian concept of the garden city, first described by British social reformer Ebenezer Howard in his book Garden Cities of To-Morrow (1902), that shaped the appearance of residential areas in the United States and Great Britain.
Ebenezer Howard, the leading light of the garden city movement, acknowledged his debt to Light by including a sketch plan of Adelaide in his seminal book Garden Cities of To-morrow.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com