Contiguous means physically in contact. So for example, of the 50 American states, 48 are contiguous.
Yes, here is an example of its usage: "The red blankets are the thickest of the ones we have in stock."
The correct spelling is immensity.
That is correct.
Conlinear is an interesting concatenation of the correct word and the wrong word. If "Collinear", the statement is wrong. If "Non-collinear", the statement is correct.
a collection of multiple ranges that are not positioned in a contiguous cluster in an Excel worksheet
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.
yes it is.
Contiguous is a word that is used normally when objects are spatially adjacent and Continuous is a word that is normally used when events are adjacent in time. This usage is probably the reason why arrays are "contiguously" allocated and not "continuously" allocated. On the other hand, a function f(t) is "continuous" and not "contiguous".
No, you mean the word "fare".
The correct usage would be "on the same plane". Plane as in "plate", "table" or "page". These are nouns. "Plain" is an adjective.
No, "sence" is not a word in standard English usage. The correct spelling is "sense."
"Anyway" is the only correct word. "Anyways" is not a genuine word, and therefore its usage is never correct.
The word "contiguous" is pronounced as kuhn-TIG-yoo-uhs.
a unidimensional
the southern ocean is contiguous with the atlantic
My father didn't give my allowance for this week.