Hello Anonymous,
Usually, a paragraph has related sentences. These are very random.
Today is *** 16th. Tomorrow is *** 17th.Okay, but "Today it is is August 25th, and tomorrow it will be the 26th" is a more common way to say this.
If I sleep one more day, I will be meeting my nephew who will be visiting us from the Phillipines.Very odd. Tomorrow, I will get to see my nephew, who will be visiting...
He has been studying there for two years now and he is coming for a month vacation.Okay in tense. A month's vacation or a month-long vacation.
I am starting to work on my two-month project on today this afternoon;, and when my nephew gets here, I will probably have finished half the project.Tenses are okay. You can finish half of a two-month project in one day?
I will probably have to spend some time with my nephew during his two-month vacation and that will likely delay my completion of the project -- how long a delay, I couldn't guess now -- and I should think about which is more important: spending time with my nephew or completing my project on time.This is fine - and very complicated. Good job on this one.
Hhew ??, this is going to be a difficult choice. But come to think of it, it's easy -- you can use a colon here too if I don't complete my project on time, I will not pass the course and that could have a drastic effect on my plan to go to the prestigious *** University; on the other hand, I will probably have many chances see my nephew and go out with him over the years ahead.Okay.
Yes, I have made the choice and that is to finish the project on time.