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unceasing
[ uhn-see-sing ]
unceasing
/ 蕦苍藞蝉颈藧蝉瑟艐 /
adjective
- not ceasing or ending
Derived Forms
- 耻苍藞肠别补蝉颈苍驳濒测, adverb
- 耻苍藞肠别补蝉颈苍驳苍别蝉蝉, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 耻苍路肠别补蝉路颈苍驳路濒测 adverb
- 耻苍路肠别补蝉路颈苍驳路苍别蝉蝉 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of unceasing1
Example Sentences
In a much-anticipated match that drew over 70,000 spectators to the home of the Dallas Cowboys on Friday, the only clear winner was the unceasing march of time.
Katz helped Rose through two divorces, an uncontested paternity suit filed by a woman claiming to have been his mistress, government liens, tax troubles and his unceasing clamor for reinstatement.
Amid the Metropolitan Police鈥檚 many failures, Stephen鈥檚 murder has never been fully solved and the 31 years since have been stolen, too, from his family, whose campaign for justice has been unceasing.
鈥淚f Kamala Harris wins, terrorist armies will wage an unceasing war to drive Jews out of the Holy Land. ... Israel will no longer exist.鈥
This is loud and turbulent and fraught with unending drama and unceasing peril.
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