Later than tomorrow

NAL123

Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2020
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Hindi
Home Country
India
Current Location
India
To the students in a class:

1) Assignments submitted later than tomorrow will not be accepted (meaning tomorrow is the deadline.)

Is this sentence correct/idiomatic?
 
To the students in a class, to mean tomorrow is the deadline:

1) Assignments submitted later than tomorrow will not be accepted.

Is this sentence correct/idiomatic?
It's grammatically correct. Is there a reason you don't just want to tell them "The deadline for submitting your assignments is tomorrow"?
 
It's grammatically correct. Is there a reason you don't just want to tell them "The deadline for submitting your assignments is tomorrow"?
Actually I wanted to know if people talk like that.
 
"After" would be more natural.
 

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