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Continuous Kənˈtɪnjuəs Improvement Employment Rain Adjective Bre Recovery

Word continuous
WordType (adjective)
Phonetic BrE / kənˈtɪnjuəs / NAmE / kənˈtɪnjuəs /
Example
  • recovery after the accident will be a continuous process that may take several months.
  • stop smoking and you will see a continuous improvement in your health.
  • she was in continuous employment until the age of sixty-five.
  • the rain has been continuous since this morning.
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Content

continuous

(adjective)BrE / kənˈtɪnjuəs / NAmE / kənˈtɪnjuəs /
  1. happening or existing for a period of time without interruption
    • Recovery after the accident will be a continuous process that may take several months.
    • Stop smoking and you will see a continuous improvement in your health.
    • She was in continuous employment until the age of sixty-five.
    • The rain has been continuous since this morning.
  2. spreading in a line or over an area without any spaces
    • a continuous line of traffic
    • Rain was falling outside in a continuous silver curtain.
  3. repeated many times
    • synonym continual
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/continual
    • For four days the town suffered continuous attacks.
    • Life was a continual struggle for them.
    • = progressive
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/progressive_1
    • the continuous tenses

    Extra Examples

    • Awards are based on continuous assessment of course work as well as a final examination.
    • Do the exercise in one continuous flowing motion.
    • Experiments were conducted in the continuous daylight of the Arctic summer.
    • He watched television as if it was one continuous programme.
    • I could hear a faint continuous noise.
    • It was a week of almost continuous sunshine.
    • It was the longest period of continuous growth in the company’s history.
    • Progress in learning a language is continuous but uneven.
    • She retired after 25 years’ continuous service with the company.
    • The company said the reasons for closure were poor margins and continuous losses.
    • The soldiers suffered continuous attacks for four days.
    • The woollen mill has been in continuous production since the 18th century.
    • These policies are vital for continuous improvement in economic performance.
    • You need to have been in continuous employment for at least two years.
    • a persistent/perpetual/continual/continuous problem

    Word Origin

    • mid 17th cent.: from Latin continuus ‘uninterrupted’, from continere ‘hang together’ (from con- ‘together with’ + tenere ‘hold’) + -ous.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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