The word continued is the past participle, past tense form of the verb 'to continue.' The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (continued success or continued episode).
The noun forms for the verb 'to continue' are continuation, continuity, and the gerund, continuing
No. Spite is a noun. One adverb form would be spitefully (in a manner suggesting spite or continued ill will).
The adjective form of the verb to persist is persistent.The noun form is persistence (continued presence, or perseverance).
The abbreviation for the word "continued" is cont or contd. This could be used in phrases such as "to be continued..."
other way to say "to be continued"
Proper noun
No, time is not a pronoun. Time is a noun that refers to the indefinite continued progress of existence and events in the past, present, and future.
It is a noun. Example: The enigma of her identity continued to distract him for the rest of the day.
No. Spite is a noun. One adverb form would be spitefully (in a manner suggesting spite or continued ill will).
The adjective form of the verb to persist is persistent.The noun form is persistence (continued presence, or perseverance).
The word 'continues' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to continue.Example: This road continues to the coast.
The abbreviation for continued is "cont."
...To Be Continued was created in 1970-11.
The word 'time' is a noun (time, times), a verb (time, times, timing, timed), and and adjective, but not a pronoun.EXAMPLESnoun: I do have enough time to finish this.verb: We have to time your next run for qualification.adjective: The time trials are scheduled for Friday.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun singular noun 'time' is it, and the plural noun 'times' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.EXAMPLESsingular: My time was good today. It was better than yesterday.plural: My times are getting better. Theyimproved the more I worked on them.
The word torpedoes is a common plural noun. It does not need an apostrophe.The torpedoes had been loaded.If torpedoes 'owns' something in the sentence, it needs an apostrophe.The tornadoes' paths continued straight.
The abbreviation for the word "continued" is cont or contd. This could be used in phrases such as "to be continued..."
The opposite of continued is actually discontinued.
Continued was created in 1968-10.