continue
[ kuhn-tin-yoo ]
/ kənˈtɪn yu /
verb (used without object), con·tin·ued, con·tin·u·ing.
verb (used with object), con·tin·ued, con·tin·u·ing.
Origin of continue
1300–50; Middle English (< Anglo-French) < Latin
continuāre to make all one, verbal derivative of
continuus
continuous
synonym study for continue
3.
Continue,
endure,
persist,
persevere,
last,
remain imply existing uninterruptedly for an appreciable length of time.
Continue implies duration or existence without break or interruption.
Endure, used of people or things, implies persistent continuance against influences that tend to weaken, undermine, or destroy.
Persist and
persevere, used principally of people, both imply firm and steadfast continuance in the face of opposition.
Persist suggests human opposition:
He persisted after he had been warned; and
persevere suggests opposition from any source, often an impersonal one:
He persevered despite fatigue.
Last often applies to something that holds out to a desired end, fresh, unimpaired, or unexhausted, sometimes under conditions that tend to produce the opposite effect:
They had provisions enough to last all winter.
Remain is especially applied to what continues without change in its essential state:
He remained a bachelor.
OTHER WORDS FROM continue
Words nearby continue
Example sentences from the Web for continuing
British Dictionary definitions for continuing
continue
/ (kənˈtɪnjuː) /
verb -ues, -uing or -ued
(when tr, may take an infinitive)
to remain or cause to remain in a particular condition, capacity, or place
(when tr, may take an infinitive)
to carry on uninterruptedly (a course of action); persist in (something)
he continued running
(when tr, may take an infinitive)
to resume after an interruption
we'll continue after lunch
to draw out or be drawn out; prolong or be prolonged
continue the chord until it meets the tangent
(tr) law, mainly Scot
to postpone or adjourn (legal proceedings)
Derived forms of continue
continuable, adjective continuer, noun continuingly, adverbWord Origin for continue
C14: from Old French
continuer, from Latin
continuāre to join together, from
continuus
continuous