Incesante in english
Incessant
pronunciation: ɪnsesənt part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: ɪnsesənt part of speech: adjective
In gestures
incesante = unrelenting ; incessant ; ceaseless ; relentless ; implacable ; inexorable ; unremitting ; unceasing ; non-stop.
Example: Unrelenting tuition increases are pricing private institutions out of the reach of many middle-class parents.Example: The great practical education of the Englishman is derived from incessant intercourse between man and man, in trade.Example: Children in modern society are faced with a ceaseless stream of new ideas, and responsibility for their upbringing has generally moved from parents to childminders and teachers.Example: They need to be relentless in their fight for adequate funding so that the library service and the profession are not jeopardised.Example: The implacable reduction in the dissemination of public documents constitutes a rebarbative policy that threatens the quality of reference services in libraries.Example: The inexorable tide of automation seems to be threatening the existence of old-fashioned, handwritten copymarking.Example: This unremitting castigation of the Nazi masks both the historical complicity of the United States with Nazi crimes and our own racist and genocidal histories.Example: But just as she pulled over the road in the pitch blackness of night she heard the unceasing sound of the night like she had never heard it.Example: A British yachtswoman has become the first woman to sail solo, non-stop, both ways around the world.more:
» lluvia incesante = incessant rain .
Example: Weeks have passed, weeks spent watching weather through windows, flash storms, incessant rains -- and now the first snow.