(1) A continuous nonspatial whole or extent or succession in which no part or portion is distinct or distinguishable from adjacent parts
(2) A continuous nonspatial whole or extent or succession in which no part or portion is distinct of distinguishable from adjacent parts [also: continua (pl)]
(3) Continuation
(1) Sexuality is much more like a continuum than two polar opposites.
(2) Symbolic, spiritual, human and bacterial life are placed in a continuum .
(3) But gender identity should be seen as a continuum , just like sexual orientation.
(4) Politics understood this way is a continuum along a single dimension.
(5) In other words, these forms may correspond to different points on a continuum .
(6) The problem is presented as a continuum from normative forms of behavior to extreme and serious attacks.
(7) The continuum of this work runs between prose, prose poetry and poetry.
(8) When a group limits its appeal to either extreme of the continuum , it is confined to a small portion of the market.
(9) Needless to say, the distinctions form a continuum , rather than discrete categories.
(10) Our work in the area of food security follows a continuum , along which are different programming stages.
(11) Each is a biological continuum with symptomatic disease at one extreme.
(12) There is no such thing as a perfect business decision, as a corporate life cycle is not an instance but a continuum .
(13) Dresden isn't a retrospective re-creation, because it exists in a separate continuum from the events that formed it.
(14) At the fast end of the fast-slow continuum
(15) Most people are not always at either extreme of the continuum of outlook on life.
(16) I don't think pleasure need be seen as a one-dimensional experience, a uniform continuum .
(17) In this study, the meanings women attached to food differed depending on where they were on the recovery continuum .
(18) In reality, of course, it is a continuum and with origins that go way back into antiquity.
(19) Blues music, as he sees it, is simply part of a continuum of black pop.
(20) A continuum of special educational needs