continual
IPA: kʌntˈɪnjuʌɫ
adjective
- Recurring in steady, rapid succession.
- (proscribed) Seemingly continuous; appearing to have no end or interruption.
- (proscribed) Forming a continuous series.
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Examples of "continual" in Sentences
- They are based in continual misrepresentations of the facts.
- Government should live in continual fear of its citizens and a free press.
- During the papal blessing, Pope Benedict spoke out against what he called the continual slaughter in Iraq.
- As for me and mine, we are in continual thanksgiving to the Lord for all of the blessings He has bestowed upon us.
- And, is it possible that all social institutions — both ethereal and physical — engaged in continual dialectic and discursive exchanges?
- If Pelosi and Reid wanted to, they could force the Congress to stay in continual session without breaking for vacations, Sundays and holidays.
- Coral8, on the other hand, has targeted a much broader swathe of the market, including what it calls continual intelligence and including non-financial environments.
- This long-lasting collaboration with Africa and Asia has resulted in continual exchanges between young scientists from the respective countries and researchers in Paris.
- Gertrude Stein wrote in what she called the continual present and she wrote with the rhythm of whatever was going on around her at the moment as she was writing I think of John Cage as the Gertrude Stein of music.
- The association is especially active in continual efforts to minimize the effect of what many residents said is the neighborhood's worst feature - traffic from Interstate 395, which exits directly into the neighborhood on Arlington Ridge Road.
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