Whats the difference between tomorrows meeting and meeting . . . The first sentence is not correct It should be "I have to attend tomorrow's meeting" "The" is normally used to indicate a specific item, for example, "the meeting" refers to a particular meeting, while "a meeting" is just any meeting Since the meeting is already singled out by it being "tomorrow's" meeting, using "the" is incorrect Additionally, the second sentence can have two slightly
Is there a one-word English term for the day after tomorrow? 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
Our meeting tomorrow Tuesday versus Our meeting tomorrow (Tuesday) If you mean that the meeting is tomorrow, which is a Tuesday, I think it would be much clearer to say "postpone tomorrow's meeting" because "postpone our meeting tomorrow" sounds like you're putting it off until tomorrow I'm not clear why it's important to emphasize that tomorrow is Tuesday - presumably everybody has a calendar - but "tomorrow Tuesday" isn't a standard English construction