Search Featured Websites:
Feature your business, services, products, events & news. Submit Website.


Breaking Top Featured Content:

procrastinate


Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day for October 29, 2021 is:

procrastinate • pruh-KRASS-tuh-nayt  • verb

Procrastinate means “to intentionally put off doing something that should be done.”

// The student was procrastinating writing the report; however, the tutor provided the needed guidance and motivation.

See the entry >

Examples:

“I will start with a confession: I procrastinated about writing this article for months. Postponing it put me in good company. The statistics are simple: 100 percent of people are guilty of procrastination.” — Daniel Revach, Haaretz, 12 Sept. 2021

Did you know?

We won’t put off telling you about out the origins of procrastinate: it comes from the Latin prefix pro-, meaning “forward,” and crastinus, “of tomorrow.” The word means moving or acting slowly so as to fall behind, and it implies blameworthy delay especially through laziness or apathy.

Continue Reading at Merriam-Webster.com Click Here.

Press Release Distribution Service
Feature your business, services, products, events & news. Submit Website.