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morrow
1[ mawr-oh, mor-oh ]
Morrow
2[ mawr-oh, mor-oh ]
noun
- Hon·o·ré Will·sie [on, -, uh, -rey , wil, -see, on-, uh, -, rey], 1880–1940, U.S. novelist.
morrow
/ ˈmɒrəʊ /
noun
- the next day
- the period following a specified event
- the morning
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of morrow1
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Example Sentences
Eventually Morrow was released with no money, vehicle, or phone.
Also, when Nelson died and Hugh Morrow did his own oral history project and talked to about 75 Rockefeller associates.
On the other side were Clay Morrow and his wife, Gemma Teller, a couple for whom love has long been synonymous with doom.
“James [Edwards] always seemed frustrated,” Morrow recalled.
“You never hear anything like this in Duncan,” said Mark Morrow, a youth pastor with the Faith Church.
Each day she resolved, "To-morrow I will tell Felipe;" and when to-morrow came, she put it off again.
All the operations of her brain related themselves somehow to to-morrow afternoon.
Let your orders for preparation go round tonight, so that your knaves may be ready to set out betimes to-morrow.
Hunter-Weston despite his heavy losses will be advancing to-morrow which should divert pressure from you.
To-morrow—a crippled veteran, and after that a pensioner drifting fast into a garrulous dotage.
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