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Continuously   /kəntˈɪnjuəsli/   Listen
Continuously

adverb
1.
At every point.
2.
With unflagging resolve.  Synonyms: ceaselessly, endlessly, incessantly, unceasingly, unendingly.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Continuously" Quotes from Famous Books



... some white-pine plank of good quality and cut it into blocks of the proper size. These are fed into a machine which sends sharp dies through them and thus cuts the match splints. Over the splint cutter a carrier chain is continuously moving, and into holes in this chain the ends of the match splints are forced at the rate of ten ...
— Makers of Many Things • Eva March Tappan

... struck her. The little domicile was quite empty of its household, but Alice entered and flung herself into a chair, where she sat quivering and breathless when Adrienne, also much excited, came in, preceded by a stream of patois that sparkled continuously. ...
— Alice of Old Vincennes • Maurice Thompson

... was no uncommon thing in these sweatshops for men to sit bent over a sewing-machine continuously from eleven to fifteen hours a day in July weather, operating a sewing-machine by foot-power, and often so driven that they could not stop for lunch. The seasonal character of the work meant demoralizing toil for a few months in the year, and a not less demoralizing idleness for the ...
— War of the Classes • Jack London

... She listened as though for the first time to the muted strains which played continuously throughout the city—calming, soothing, lulling. "Of ...
— DP • Arthur Dekker Savage

... disposition to be everything else, and the inalienable possibility of being it. If he has made his choice of one thing, all the other possibilities are always open to him, and are constantly claiming to be realised; and he has therefore to be continuously keeping them back, and to be overpowering and killing them as long as he wants to be that one thing. For example, if he wants to think only, and not act and do business, the disposition to the latter is not thereby destroyed all at once; but as long as the thinker ...
— The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer; The Art of Controversy • Arthur Schopenhauer


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