1.She will be available by tomorrow
2. She is available on tomorrow
She will be available by tomorrow When by is used to refer to time, it denotes approximation. So, it does not go well with "will" which denotes certainty. Again use of "by" with "tomorrow" sounds odd.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
anonymous1.She will be available by tomorrow
When by is used to refer to time, it denotes approximation. So, it does not go well with "will" which denotes certainty.
Again use of "by" with "tomorrow" sounds odd.
Thus, you can consider this:
She is likely to be available tomorrow.
anonymousShe is available on to
No sentence is correct if it doesn't end with a punctuation mark.
These are correct:
3. She will be available tomorrow.
4. She will be available from tomorrow.