It is the same thing as saying uninterrupted days, with no breaks inbetween. Sometimes a property is listed by more than one agent, so the listing would only show the number of days from the last listing. You might want to know the total number of days it has actually been on the market, and that might be called the contiguous days.
Periodic
What does off the market really mean does it mean that the house is sold or is awaiting to be closed on.
MEA = Middle East and Africa market
Market return is the return on the market as a whole, called the market portfolio. A return in the stock market is the yield or profit that an investor earns from a security.
Market
it means sharing common border (in geographical terms) By fiama Pschaidt Regarding finance, it means "uninterrupted" as in "contiguous days on the market"
It means it is not contiguous. Hawaii and Alaska are not contiguous states.
48 states are contiguous. Two states, Alaska and Hawaii are non-contiguous.
Same as contiguous - "1, 2 & 3 are contigeous numbers"
Contiguous means touching. Alaska is not one of the contiguous states.
"is my disease contiguous
First Class Mail within the contiguous US States is delivered in three to five days.
Flea in french is Puce, the phrase flea market comes from France when back in the days, the "marche aux puces" was infested with fleas.
There were eight days, including a market day. There were eight days, including a market day. and so on an do fourth :)
My research shows that usage of "contiguous to" has greatly exceeded "contiguous with" for several centuries until relatively recently. Usage of "contiguous to" still exceeds "contiguous with," but by a very narrow margin. Try plugging these into a Google n-gram and you'll see the usage history since 1800.
My research shows that usage of "contiguous to" has greatly exceeded "contiguous with" for several centuries until relatively recently. Usage of "contiguous to" still exceeds "contiguous with," but by a very narrow margin. Try plugging these into a Google n-gram and you'll see the usage history since 1800.
No state is contiguous.