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'procrastinate it' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when one has a task that they are deliberately delaying or postponing. For example, "Hurry up and finish the project! Don't procrastinate it!".
Exact(6)
"Even though it has been here for 20 years, it doesn't procrastinate, it just gets on with it.
The other thing is that there are so many more distractions out there these days that if you want to procrastinate, it's much easier to do.
If you procrastinate, it will be more difficult to take action and there will be more inner resistance.
If you complain about it or procrastinate it's not going to go away.
Do not procrastinate; it will get you nowhere.
Don't procrastinate, it won't help in the long run and you'll just end up stressing more.
Similar(52)
But the evidence we have does suggest that while people have always procrastinated, it's become a much bigger problem in modern times, and in fact it seems to have become a much bigger problem just in the past few decades.
I have been procrastinating it because I was too scared to do the shoot!
By the time you find yourself procrastinating, it is already too late.
If we don't particularly want to procrastinate, and it causes us discomfort to do so, why do we persist in doing it?
Americans have been known to procrastinate when it comes to finances, and some economists expect a last-minute rush as the April 30 deadline for the credit nears.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com