What's the difference between flipside and tomorrow?

Flipside


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It's the demented flipside of David Guetta bringing Euro house into the mainstream.
  • (2) This is not an argument for the status quo: teaching must be given greater priority within HE, but the flipside has to be an understanding on the part of students, ministers, officials, the public and the media that academics (just like politicians) cannot make everyone happy all of the time.
  • (3) The flipside of the review is that a number of core BBC services are likely to benefit from millions of pounds of investment in areas including quality drama, children's shows and overseas journalism.
  • (4) Third, on the flipside, tapering may be so modest that it will barely be noticed by consumers and businesses out in the real economy, away from the frenzy of Wall Street.
  • (5) Higher gilt yields – the flipside of falling bond prices – increase the cost of borrowing for the government and tend to push up interest rates across the economy, which could jeopardise economic recovery.
  • (6) The flipside is that those athletes who are closest to him will be bereft.
  • (7) The flipside of austerity was supposed to be a fundamental rebalancing of the economy.
  • (8) The flipside to the weakness of sterling is that Britain's exports are cheaper, but such is the shrivelled state of the country's manufacturing base that the balance of trade is still heavily in the red.
  • (9) Knitting and sewing take place at its Los Angeles HQ, and it boasts an enviable benefits package for its workers (on the flipside, CEO Dov Charney has been dogged by accusations of alleged sexual harassment, which throws up its own ethical quandaries).
  • (10) Yarl’s Wood is the flipside of the migrant crisis: its existence shows that many migrants who arrive in the UK ( a negligible proportion of migrants globally) are not free to threaten our “standard of living”, as Philip Hammond would have it .
  • (11) Arsène Wenger rejects Gary Neville attack after Arsenal-Liverpool 0-0 Read more On the flipside a case can also be made that Arsenal, for all their shortcomings, could conceivably have pulled off a perplexing and eccentric victory.
  • (12) After training, a couple of the players sit down and reveal the flipside of their money-no-object world: huge pressure.
  • (13) But the flipside was that I often felt I had lost my butchness.
  • (14) But the flipside of living longer is being exposed to the cruel, creeping, degenerative diseases of old age – certain cancers, or Alzheimer's, or Parkinson's – which we might once have escaped by the admittedly double-edged trick of succumbing to something else first.
  • (15) The flipside is the quiet approval and social plaudits afforded to women who perform a nurturing, maternal role.
  • (16) The flipside for Arsenal is that it is not a bad thing for a team to avoid defeat on the days when they struggle to be at their more cohesive and Wenger can be hugely encouraged by the fact Giroud’s late feat of escapology means they have lost only one of their last 22 top-division fixtures.
  • (17) But the damaging flipside of a low oil price was provided by a now besieged North Sea oil and gas industry, which said the price slump was causing major problems.
  • (18) She has also become aware of the "flipside" through her Antigone Foundation, which funds charities working in healthcare and education.
  • (19) "Animal welfare is an absolutely crucial flipside to the patient benefit argument, but what we're worried about is that we're going to end up with EU-led legislation which essentially piles a whole load of bureaucracy on the shoulders of busy scientists and ends up not doing anything at all for animal welfare, and delays potentially life-saving research."
  • (20) If we expect self-employed childminders to pass on at least some of the benefits of taking on an extra toddler through lower prices, the flipside for them is onerous new responsibilities and a dramatic increase in productivity, for a fraction more pay.

Tomorrow


Definition:

  • (adv.) On the day after the present day; on the next day; on the morrow.
  • (n.) The day after the present; the morrow.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Tomorrow the courts are expected to sign off a $97.5m payment by the company to its shareholders, after investors took a class action lawsuit against the company.
  • (2) The agreement, hailed as a "landmark" deal and a breakthrough by politicians and the green lobby alike, came before a crucial EU summit opening in Brussels tomorrow at which 27 prime ministers and presidents are supposed to finalise an ambitious package to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20% by 2020.
  • (3) In the dance off tomorrow should be Dave and Karen and Mark and Iveta, but it wouldn't surprise me if Fiona and Anton were in the bottom two instead.
  • (4) A report of the meeting will be published tomorrow in the Pharmaceutical Journal.
  • (5) Obama will meet with Binyamin Netanyahu and Mahmoud Abbas tomorrow as well, but US envoy George Mitchell has had no luck in recent weeks trying to persuade Netanyahu to compromise on the settlements.
  • (6) Tomorrow, I'm going to get on a plane and go to another city and admittedly my carbon footprint is massive.
  • (7) "Tonight we can celebrate, but tomorrow we have to go back to work", she said, but her followers didn't have any of it.
  • (8) Asked by television reporters outside the church for comment on the officers’ decision to turn their backs, Lynch said: “The feeling is real, but today is about mourning, tomorrow is about debate.” Pressed on the point, Lynch said: “We have to understand the betrayal that they feel.
  • (9) Photograph: Instagram Callander, who was studying health and social care at Runshaw College in Leyland, Lancashire, sent a Twitter message to Grande on Sunday, saying: “SO EXCITED TO SEE YOU TOMORROW.” She had previously posted a photograph of herself with the singer taken in 2015 on her Instagram account.
  • (10) Hopefully it could be just a week 7.03pm Michel texts Adam Smith thanks for your patience today 9.31pm Michel texts Adam Smith are you publishing the Slaughters and May opinion tomorrow?
  • (11) The euro clawed back some losses after the European Central Bank said it would absorb €16.5bn from the money markets to compensate for bond purchases up to 14 May, and Greece said it would receive the first tranche of emergency loans tomorrow.
  • (12) "You've just reminded me I have to go to the tripe shop tomorrow," one correspondent tells him.
  • (13) Theodora Oikonomides (@IrateGreek) #Greece The area of Athens where demos are banned tomorrow seems to cover Merkel's itinerary and does NOT include planned demo raods #rbnews October 8, 2012 Updated at 12.45pm BST 11.53am BST Thousands of Greek police to protect Angela Merkel Major protests are expected in Athens on Tuesday when Angela Merkel visits the Greek capital.
  • (14) A British oil firm will tomorrow announce that it has struck oil off Greenland, a find that could trigger a rush to exploit oil reserves in the pristine waters of the Arctic.
  • (15) That's all for tonight - for all joined us tonight, tomorrow or wherever you are, thank you for reading.
  • (16) The slogan will be unveiled at a rally in Warwick tomorrow, but Alexander gave no hint of Gordon Brown calling an election before 6 May, emphasising the need for a slow reappraisal of Labour to take root.
  • (17) If you are a London commuter dreading tube strike chaos this evening and tomorrow there is an alternative to fighting your way on to overcrowded buses or a long walk.
  • (18) "He'll continue tomorrow with some light conditioning, and then expand to more functional work from the 27th through the 31st," general manager Brian Cashman said.
  • (19) "It's jam tomorrow for the investors but champagne today for the investment bankers," said another.
  • (20) I don’t want to talk about that.” Will you shake hands tomorrow?

Words possibly related to "flipside"

Words possibly related to "tomorrow"