Yestertoday
the technical yesterday when you haven’t gone to sleep yet. when it’s two am, you’d count the evening as part of today since you haven’t gone to sleep yet. but you can’t do this because it’s technically a new day. so yesterday becomes yestertoday until you go to sleep or p-ss out.
4am at a kebab shop: “i just heard about this place from a friend yestertoday!”
Read Also:
- Yesterwear
wearing the same clothes for a second consecutive day because you didn’t make it home to change. hey check out doug – he’s still in yesterwear cause he crashed on the couch after everybody left the party.
- yesteryear
years ago, not last year, as you would -ssume from the meaning of ‘yesterday’. it’s much more general. middle english, not really in use nowadays. i think back to my golden memories of yesteryear… a word meaning last year. yester can also be put in front of other words. ex. yesteryear yestermonth yesterday yestertime yesterhour […]
- Yesteryesterday
the day before yesterday. how was the party yesteryesterday?
- Yesteryorrow
yesteryorrow, or yester-yorrow is the word used when talking about the day before yesterday. the day after tomorrow is simply yorrow “i still can’t believe how funny it was when we got attacked by them geese at the barn yesteryorrow!” “lets just hope it doesn’t happen when we go back yorrow!”
- Yestoday
when it’s midnight and you are talking about the day you just spent, and get it confused with the day before because it’s past midnight and your mind is technically set on the next day, though you didn’t sleep yet. roxanne @ midnight: “i can’t believe that i travelled so much yestoday. i’m so tired.”