Question: What are the origins and history of using on tomorrow, on today, and on yesterday ** (which in standard Englishes are just tomorrow, today, and yesterday)? Examples: US Journal of the Senate (2006, all bold font added): ORDERS FOR ADJOURNMENT UNTIL 9 A.M. ON TOMORROW ...
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The Until activity in Data Factory pipelines in Microsoft Fabric executes a set of activities in a loop until the condition associated with the activity evaluates to true or it times out.
The Until activity in Azure Data Factory and Synapse Analytics pipelines executes a set of activities in a loop until the condition associated with the activity evaluates to true or it times out.
You can use either While or Until to specify condition, but not both. If you give neither, the loop continues until an Exit transfer control out of the loop. You can test condition only one time, at either the start or the end of the loop. If you test condition at the start of the loop (in the Do statement), the loop might not run even one time.
Today means "the current day", so if you're asking what day of the week it is, it can only be in present tense, since it's still that day for the whole 24 hours. In other contexts, it's okay to say, for example, "Today has been a nice day" nearer the end of the day, when the events that made it a nice day are finished (or at least, nearly so).