Continuing vs. continued - English Language Usage Stack Exchange It seems to me that the implication of continued is "not yet ended," with a hint that the persistence of the involvement goes against expectations In contrast, continuing seems to me to be a neutral way of saying simply "ongoing " I don't see continued (as you seem to) as being, under normal circumstances, a synonym for resumed –
Is it ever correct to use on after continue? After he caught his breath, he continued on with the race Your question asks about "continue" and whether or not it can be paired with "on " This is a matter of taste and a person's ideas about the verb continue In my opinion "on" can be This page had numerous examples which seemed fine to me Can you leave out "on?" Sure
What is the correct abbreviation of continued? [closed] Just write “(continued)” (including parens), and you’ll be fine If you have some sort of mania for them, or horizontal-space consideration, then sure, write “(cont )” It’s a good idea to set it in italic, no matter what you do In your case, though, you should probably write one of: 2012 – present; 2012 –
grammaticality - Continue or continues? - English Language Usage . . . Rusty Core, you seem to have misunderstood my comment In this case, "continue" is correct Some native speakers, in cases like this (though not specifically this one), would make the verb agree with the word that precedes the verb, but this would be incorrect
verbs - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
expressions - How to use continued at a bottom of a page? - English . . . TOPIC NAME continued on page X; Be aware that as you edit documents the page numbers change Many word processors can manage that by tracking the page number as it changes if you take the time to learn to set it up None of them need to be placed at the bottom of the page
Continue to + verb? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Differences across languages should be explored on Linguistics SE 'He continued to read' and 'He continued reading' are synonymous to a high degree (contrast 'He stopped to look' and 'He stopped looking') Verbs are very idiosyncratic in the way they behave –
Should I use continue to be or continue being? I believe in this application one would rather say "continue being" Both are correct, however "continue being" allows for less of a pause in the sentence tempo when read
continue [through] to - English Language Usage Stack Exchange "Continued through to" does not normally appear with continuous entities such as trends, but rather with discrete entities such as payments It works well with fuzzy concepts like "effects" or "manifestations" which might be either