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.
Stars in the universe go on and on ad infinitum. It simply means 'forever' or 'to infinity'.
Twice, with a comma before and between, like this: The frumpy lecturer went boringly on and on ad infinitum and even beyond, etc, etc.
Not the first time! But beware the guilt ad infinitum.
Yes. Such as - 'Tim talked on and on ad infinitum' - would be a valid example of using it in a sentence. ~fiendishfish
Montaña Infinitum was created in 2007.
Infinitum Nihil was created in 2004.
The opposite of ad infinitum would be concise.
Invictus Infinitum was created on 2009-06-06.
et = and; infinitum = infinty. Thus "and infinity". Though the correct phrases would be: et al (and others). ad infinitum (to infinity) Regards. Cat
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!"
Impossible to answer - since you're specifying 'ad infinitum' which means 'to infinity'.