"Continually" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Continually means regularly and repeatedly, without interruption or pause. It can also mean continuously or incessantly, suggesting a constant or ongoing process or action. For example: "She continually worked on improving her language skills."
Contingence refers to the state of being dependent on or conditional upon something else, often implying a degree of uncertainty or unpredictability. It can also refer to a situation in which one event or circumstance is linked to or dependent on another, often in a way that is subject to change or variable.
Dependent on or influenced by specific circumstances or conditions, rather than being fixed or absolute.
Continuative refers to something that continues or maintains a particular state, action, or process over a period of time. It can also refer to something that has a continuous or ongoing effect or impact. In grammar, a continuative is a verb form that indicates that an action is in progress at a specific time or continuously from a point in the past to a point in the present.
Continuatives are a type of grammatical aspect in English that indicate continuity or ongoingness. They are used to describe an action that started in the past and continues up to the present, or is expected to continue in the future. The continuatives are:<br><br> -ing (e.g. I am writing a letter)<br> being (e.g. I am being happy)<br> getting (e.g. I am getting tired)<br> going (e.g. I am going to the store)<br><br>Continuatives are often used in progressive tenses, such as present continuous (e.g. I am writing), past continuous (e.g. I was writing), and future continuous (e.g. I will be writing).