We class words like "he", "she" and "they" as pronouns.
Is there a category of words that "yesterday", "today" and "tomorrow" fall into?
We class words like "he", "she" and "they" as pronouns.
Is there a category of words that "yesterday", "today" and "tomorrow" fall into?
It depends on the usage. "Yesterday," "today," and "tomorrow" can either be nouns or adverbs. In "Today is a good day." Then "today" is a noun. But if you say, "I'll see you tomorrow," then it's an adverb, since "tomorrow" is modifying the verb, "see." If it's an adverb, it's sometimes called an adverb of time, along with other words like "later," "now," "next year," or "last week."
Should I be calling them "temporal nouns" / "temporal adverbs" or is there another term for these words.
– ChrisGuest Nov 20 '14 at 05:02