Never put off until tomorrow what you can do today. Putting it off until tomorrow might mean that it never gets done.
Nothing - the correct phrase is "like there was no tomorrow" and it makes perfect sense as it is, so it's not an idiom. If there was not going to be a tomorrow, you'd try to get as much done today as you possibly could.
If you accomplish all that you need to get done today.
Thomas Jefferson The quote is: "Never put off tomorrow what you can do today"
"Ready for tomorrow" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase pronti per domani. The masculine plural adjective and prepositional phrase also translate into English as "done (prepared) for tomorrow." The pronunciation will be "PRON-tee per do-MA-nee" in Italian.
Loads. "Is this a dagger which I see before me", "If it were done when 'tis done, then it were well it were done quickly", and "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day" leap to mind.
Can the work be done tomorrow Will the work be done tomorrow Should the mail be posted tonight etc
well if our speech is due tomorrow then i would work on it till im done it
Organic farming does not have an author. It was done from the very start of farming until people discovered how to make synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, and it is done today.
There is a phrase that is used such as BEING DONE instead of TO BE DONE. These two words are having save meaning or what?
The way you have done so is fine.
"Git-R-Done" is a phrase that was coined by comedian Larry the Cable Guy.