The Day After
The day after yesterday is "tod?ge"; the day after today is "tomorgne"; the day after tomorrow is "overmorrow", and the day before yesterday is "ereyesterday".
These are very old-fashioned words, so if you use them you might not be understood. People who do understand you may wonder why you are talking in an old-fashioned way, like a Shakespeare character.
According to Newton, “Absolute Time” exists independently of any perceiver and progresses at a consistent pace throughout the Universe. Unlike “Relative Time,” he believed Absolute Time was imperceptible and could only be understood mathematically.
Arithmetically, “Obsolete Time” is the date on which it is predict that something will be practically useless regardless of whether or not it is still functioning, no longer in use or no longer current.
Metaphorically, “Time after Time” is time and again, recurrently.
That said, a plan for a “Day After” is like a plan for a “Morning After” being the unpleasant results of a precedent activity…
?
?Food for thought!