broadly: a compact set which cannot be separated into two sets neither of which contains a limit point of the other
Example Sentences
His motives for volunteering lie somewhere on the continuum between charitable and self-serving. a continuum of temperatures ranging from very cold to very hot
Recent Examples on the WebData democratization must be viewed as a full continuum of options between those extremes. Stan Klimoff, Forbes, 27 June 2022 That the Aral Sea represents an advanced stage on a continuum along which the whole planet is hurtling - hotter, water-deprived, despoiled - merely drove the point home. Henry Wismayer, Anchorage Daily News, 30 Aug. 2022 Ukraine's achievement will certainly enter the history books not just along the continuum of Thermopylae onwards as a feat of arms, but also in the tradition of Dunkirk as an example of massive volunteer mobilization. Melik Kaylan, Forbes, 24 July 2022 The time space continuum would not be able to continue. Katcy Stephan, Variety, 8 Apr. 2022 Maybe especially when the place has been completely decimated by a rip in the space-time continuum caused by the Grandfather Paradox. Maggie Fremont, EW.com, 22 June 2022 The 46-year-old ship broker from Arlington, Virginia, has a marathon personal best of 2:17, and his race résumé seems to defy the space-time continuum. The Editors, Outside Online, 10 Nov. 2020 Kaytranada at the Anthem: Precious few producer-DJs can condense the entire space-time continuum of diasporic dance music into one song, album or set like Kaytranada.Washington Post, 11 Oct. 2020 Her book is challenging to summarize because its findings and recommendations are specific and detailed for each age group on the birth-to-age-6 continuum. Jim Higgins, Journal Sentinel, 21 July 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Medieval Latin, noun derivative from neuter of Latin continuuscontinuous