The abbreviation for the word "continued" is cont or contd. This could be used in phrases such as "to be continued..."
cont.cont'd...are both "generally accepted" abbreviations of 'continued', for use in 'general writing'. Some may dispute that a contraction is not an abbreviation, technically. However, many publications use one form or the other. When used to indicate that a topic is continued on another page, "continued" is assumed, rather than as an instruction to 'continue' reading.Other technical reference sources, such as the American National Standards Institute, have more stringent definitions, relating to technical publications, of what an abbreviation is, for use in ANSI publications and as a legal matter."cont." is not a correct abbreviation (since it contains a punctuation)"cont'd" is a contraction (with apostrophe for omitted letters)."contd" is a true (which excludes punctuation) and unambiguous (which can't be confused with "continue") abbreviation of "continued"Details on http://www.grammarly.com/answers/questions/12969-abbreviation-of-continued and http://www.macmillandictionary.com/thesaurus-category/american/Written-abbreviationsYou may observe, in the details cited above, the MacMillan Dictionary's usage of 'punctuation' (a period) for many examples of abbreviations... even including the form "contd.", with a period. Many other dictionary sources include punctuation in their cited abbreviations... presumably for 'general writing'.
The abbreviation of "have not" is "haven't."
The abbreviation of electron is e−.
There would be no abbreviation for Houston, but the abbreviation for Texas is TX.
There is no abbreviation.
The abbreviation for continued is "cont."
Cont.
con.
Contd.
It could mean the abbreviation for continued.
cont.cont'd...are both "generally accepted" abbreviations of 'continued', for use in 'general writing'. Some may dispute that a contraction is not an abbreviation, technically. However, many publications use one form or the other. When used to indicate that a topic is continued on another page, "continued" is assumed, rather than as an instruction to 'continue' reading.Other technical reference sources, such as the American National Standards Institute, have more stringent definitions, relating to technical publications, of what an abbreviation is, for use in ANSI publications and as a legal matter."cont." is not a correct abbreviation (since it contains a punctuation)"cont'd" is a contraction (with apostrophe for omitted letters)."contd" is a true (which excludes punctuation) and unambiguous (which can't be confused with "continue") abbreviation of "continued"Details on http://www.grammarly.com/answers/questions/12969-abbreviation-of-continued and http://www.macmillandictionary.com/thesaurus-category/american/Written-abbreviationsYou may observe, in the details cited above, the MacMillan Dictionary's usage of 'punctuation' (a period) for many examples of abbreviations... even including the form "contd.", with a period. Many other dictionary sources include punctuation in their cited abbreviations... presumably for 'general writing'.
The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.
The abbreviation for abbreviation is "abbr."
The abbreviation for centimeter is cm. The abbreviation for meter is m. The abbreviation for inches is in. The abbreviation for liter is L.
D stands for "denarius". It comes from when, back in the Roman times, the British used Roman currency (which was called the denarius). As the penny replaced the Denarius, the British continued to use the abbreviation "d." They passed this tradition on to South Africa, so the D on African coins is an abbreviation for penny.
C/W is used for "Continue with", which I think is the closest thing to just "Continue" like: Continue with current therapy, or the like.If you are looking for "Continued" then the standard "cont." is what you want.
No, they are abbreviations.An abbreviation can be a short form for any part of speech, for example:oz. = ounces, a nouncont. = continued, a verbi.e. = that is (id est), a relative pronoun + verbLtd. = Limited (limited liability), an adjective