To help you, here is a famous quotation from Shakespeare: "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day." (Macbeth) Here is another one: "Call on me tomorrow, and you will find me a grave man." (Romeo and Juliet)
Basically, "tomorrow" is "tomorrow"--not surprising really, since Elizabethan English is not a different language from our own.
No, it is not proper English to say "on tomorrow." The correct phrase is "tomorrow."
Elizabethan English word for taste is the same as modern English. It hasn't changed.
whilst
"These" in Elizabethan English is exactly the same as it is in all other forms of Modern English: "these" e.g. "Where are these lads? Where are these hearts?" (Midsummer Night's Dream)
Ears. As in "Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears." Elizabethan English is modern English--most words are the same now as they were then.
Translation: tomorrow OR morning
Today is Wednesday morning
Elizabethan English is Modern English, just an early form of it.
In Elizabethan English, if someone were inclined to say "happy birthday", it would probably be said "happy birthday". People didn't celebrate birthdays much in those days, so there are no examples that leap to mind.
In English that means "What will the weather be like tomorrow?" or "What is the weather for tomorrow?" Both are correct.
In Elizabethan English, homework would be referred to as "taskwork" or "lesson work".
сделайте вы работайте завтра is Russian.Literal: Do you work tomorrow?English language translation: Are you working tomorrow?