T.S Eliot's "The Waste Land" and Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales differ in their interpretation as they describe April's showers. In "The Waste Land", T.S Eliot described it as "sweet", but in The Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer, he described it as cruel. Hope this answer helps.
A. present
Present Simple Tense form:
Subject + Verb (+ s/es) + Object
a. will race
The verb phrase in the statement above is "will race". In order to better understand what verb phrase is, one must have a clear understanding of what is a verb and what is a phrase. A verb phrase can be the sentence's predicate or a clause. The predicate is the part of the sentence that tells what the subject is doing. A verb phrase sometimes serves as an adjective or adverb complete with a verb, the complements and others.
Answer:
You should stop saying "I will get to it later" and just get over with it now. Because once you finish your task as soon as possible you won't have that much pressure on you and you will feel tens times better. Then a big weight will lift off of your shoulders. Trust me with this stop stalling and just do what you said you would do.
Explanation: