Definition of Continuousness in English :

Define Continuousness in English

Continuousness meaning in English

Meaning of Continuousness in English

Pronunciation of Continuousness in English

Continuousness pronunciation in English

Pronounce Continuousness in English

Continuousness

see synonyms of continuousness

Noun

1. ceaselessness, continuousness, incessancy, incessantness

the quality of something that continues without end or interruption

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Continuousness

see synonyms of continuousness
adjective
1. 
prolonged without interruption; unceasing
a continuous noise
2. 
in an unbroken series or pattern
3. mathematics
(of a function or curve) changing gradually in value as the variable changes in value. A function f is continuous if at every value a of the independent variable the difference between f(x) and f(a) approaches zero as x approaches a
Compare discontinuous (sense 2), See also limit (sense 5)
4. statistics
(of a variable) having a continuum of possible values so that its distribution requires integration rather than summation to determine its cumulative probability
Compare discrete (sense 3)
5. grammar another word for progressive (sense 8)

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Continuousness

see synonyms of continuousness
adjective
1. 
going on or extending without interruption or break; unbroken; connected
2.  Ancient Mathematics
designating a function whose value at each point is closely approached by its values at neighboring points

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.


Continuousness

see synonyms of continuousness
adj.
1. Uninterrupted in time, sequence, substance, or extent. See Synonyms at continual.
2. Attached together in repeated units: a continuous form fed into a printer.
3. Mathematics
a. Of or relating to a line or curve that extends without a break or irregularity.
b. Of or relating to a function between two topological spaces such that the preimage of any open set in the range is an open set in the domain.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.