continue
verbEtymology
From Middle English continuen, from Old French continuer, from Latin continuāre. Displaced native Middle English thurghwonen, from Old English þurhwunian.
- derived from continuāre
- derived from continuer
- inherited from continuen
Definitions
To proceed with (doing an activity)
To proceed with (doing an activity); to prolong (an activity).
- Shall I continue speaking, or will you just interrupt me again?
- Do you want me to continue to unload these?
- Firstly, I continue to base most species treatments on personally collected material, rather than on herbarium plants.
To make last
To make last; to prolong.
- Can you account him wise or discreet that would willingly have his health, and yet will do nothing that should procure or continue it?
To retain (someone or something) in a given state, position, etc.
- […] dip the mouth of it within the second glass and remove your finger; continue it in that posture for a time, and it will unmingle the wine from the water […]
- The schools were very much the brainchild of Bertin, and although the latter was ousted from the post of Controller-General by Choiseul in 1763, he was continued by the king as a fifth secretary of state […].
›+ 5 more definitionsshow fewer
To remain in a given place or condition
To remain in a given place or condition; to remain in connection with; to abide; to stay.
- Here to continue, and build up here / A growing empire.
- They continue with me now three days, and have nothing to eat.
- He then passed by the fellow, who still continued in the posture in which he fell, and entered the room where Northerton, as he had heard, was confined.
To resume.
- When will the concert continue?
To adjourn, prorogue, put off.
- This meeting has been continued to the thirteenth of July.
To make a continuation bet.
An option allowing the player to resume play after game over, when all lives have been…
An option allowing the player to resume play after game over, when all lives have been lost, while retaining their progress.
- So if you died battling the green monster inside the cave—and you had run out of lives—maybe a continue would be available.
- Moreover, where three lives and a sparse availability of extra life-giving '1-Ups' marked the 1991 experience, the iPod player is offered an unlimited number of continues with which to progress through the gameworld.
The neighborhood
- synonymcarry onproceed with, to prolong
- synonymcrack onproceed with, to prolong
- synonymgo on withproceed with, to prolong
- synonymkeepproceed with, to prolong
- synonymkeep onproceed with, to prolong
- synonymkeep upproceed with, to prolong
- synonymproceed withproceed with, to prolong
- synonymsustainproceed with, to prolong
- synonymretainproceed with, to prolong
- antonymterminateantonym(s) of “transitive, proceed with, to prolong”
- antonymstopantonym(s) of “transitive, proceed with, to prolong”
- antonymdiscontinueantonym(s) of “transitive, proceed with, to prolong”
- neighborcontain
- neighborcontinent
- neighborcontinental
- neighborcontinual
- neighborcontinuity
- neighborcontinuous
- neighborcontinuum
Derived
continuable, continual, continually, continuant, continuation, continuative, continuatively, continued fraction, continuedly, continued on page 94, continued page 94, continue on one's merry way, continuing education, continuingly, continuing resolution, continuity, continuous, continuously, continuum, discontinue, miscontinue, noncontinuing, recontinue, to be continued
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at continue. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at continue. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
7 hops · closes at continue
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA