Stars in the universe go on and on ad infinitum. It simply means 'forever' or 'to infinity'.
We continued walking through the woods ad infinitum, never reaching the end of the dense forest.
use ize in sentence
A quintillionth of a second is equal to 1 x 10^-18 seconds. It is an incredibly small unit of time, typically used in fields such as quantum mechanics or high-speed computing.
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.
Sure, I can use "so" at the beginning of a sentence.
Yes, if the ellipsis falls at the end of a sentence, you should use a period after it to indicate the end of the sentence.
Ad infinitum the boy punches his pillow with rage.
The mathematical area of a circle is a measurement that repeats itself ad infinitum. The number system continues ad infinitum. opposite of ad infinitum is finite, as in there is a limit.
The opposite of ad infinitum would be concise.
Not the first time! But beware the guilt ad infinitum.
Twice, with a comma before and between, like this: The frumpy lecturer went boringly on and on ad infinitum and even beyond, etc, etc.
To infinity. Indefinitely. Endlessly. --- Ad infinitum is Latin for "to infinity", In English use it means "endless", and is generally used to mean that something seemed endless - "John spoke about his interest in collecting beermats and went on ad infinitum." would 'translate' as "his audience got bored after 5 minutes!"
Yes. Such as - 'Tim talked on and on ad infinitum' - would be a valid example of using it in a sentence. ~fiendishfish
Impossible to answer - since you're specifying 'ad infinitum' which means 'to infinity'.
The cast of Ad Infinitum - 2008 includes: Karl Hammerle as Noam Jono Mason as Rick
"ad" isn't an abbreviation here. It is Latin and means as much as "to" or "until". So "ad infinitum" means something like "until infinity" or "neverending".
et = and; infinitum = infinty. Thus "and infinity". Though the correct phrases would be: et al (and others). ad infinitum (to infinity) Regards. Cat
66.666666% ad infinitum