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  • Here today, gone tomorrow
    Here today, gone tomorrow
    What is present or important now may be absent or irrelevant in the future.
  • here today, gone tomorrow
    here today, gone tomorrow
    Lacking permanence, fleeting. For example, His book attracted a great deal of attention but quickly went out of print—here today and gone tomorrow. Originally alluding to the briefness of the human lifespan, this phrase was first recorded in John Calvin's Life and Conversion of a Christian Man (1549): “This proverb that man is here today and gone tomorrow.”
Synonyms

Here today, gone tomorrow

Cultural  
  1. What is present or important now may be absent or irrelevant in the future.


here today, gone tomorrow Idioms  
  1. Lacking permanence, fleeting. For example, His book attracted a great deal of attention but quickly went out of print—here today and gone tomorrow. Originally alluding to the briefness of the human lifespan, this phrase was first recorded in John Calvin's Life and Conversion of a Christian Man (1549): “This proverb that man is here today and gone tomorrow.”


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It’s as if they’re here today, gone tomorrow.

From Seattle Times • Sep. 21, 2016

Will we, like them, be here today, gone tomorrow?

From New York Times • Apr. 25, 2013

In either case, you can be here today, gone tomorrow.

From The Guardian • Mar. 28, 2013

Uranium mines are here today, gone tomorrow but the pollution they leave behind is here for a very long time.”

From BusinessWeek • Jan. 10, 2012

Leah and I tried to explain to her how in Africa the roads are here today, gone tomorrow.

From "The Poisonwood Bible" by Barbara Kingsolver