Antonyms for procrastinating
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : proh-kras-tuh-neyt, pruh- |
Phonetic Transcription : proʊˈkræs təˌneɪt, prə- |
Definition of procrastinating
Origin :- 1580s, a back formation from procrastination or else from Latin procrastinatus, past participle of procrastinare "to put off till tomorrow; defer, delay" (see procrastination). Related: Procrastinated; procrastinating. Earlier verb was procrastine (1540s), from French.
- verb delay, put off doing
- It was not quick to move or easily excited; but stolid, cautious, unambitious, procrastinating.
- Extract from : « Laws » by Plato
- The last had passed like the others in procrastinating from hour to hour.
- Extract from : « Madame Bovary » by Gustave Flaubert
- The last had passed like the others, in procrastinating from hour to hour.
- Extract from : « Madame Bovary » by Gustave Flaubert
- If you are one of the procrastinating kind, start in at once and get over it.
- Extract from : « Nuggets of the New Thought » by William Walker Atkinson,
- Oh, this procrastinating mail, and this procrastinating post-office!
- Extract from : « The English Mail-Coach and Joan of Arc » by Thomas de Quincey
- The proposal does not, however, "fetch" the Emperor, who goes on procrastinating.
- Extract from : « Odd Bits of History » by Henry W. Wolff
- She knew, as well as anyone, that she was lazy and procrastinating in the city.
- Extract from : « Natalie: A Garden Scout » by Lillian Elizabeth Roy
- You say I am always either too precipitate or too procrastinating.
- Extract from : « The Eulogy of Richard Jefferies » by Walter Besant
- The Pope did not believe it, and became again “lax and procrastinating.”
- Extract from : « The Divorce of Catherine of Aragon » by J.A. Froude
- With this moral debility is joined the procrastinating spirit of the oriental.
- Extract from : « The Andes and the Amazon » by James Orton
Synonyms for procrastinating
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019