Constantly in a sentence as an adverb

Our chocolate milk was constantly taken by bullies. We got knocked out cold in dodge ball.

Finally, they constantly do this thing where they say, "Oh man my code is so awesome it's written in C++ and is so fast. No you can't see it.

They constantly seek some purer, higher standard and don't quite get that those rules are guidelines that are a means to an end and not an end in themselves. 2."

Pick places at random, have low expectations, and spend your life constantly being pleasantly surprised.

Don't let these flaws stop you, though--Persona is very well done and constantly getting better. I've had hundreds of people sign up for paid accounts and only two have had trouble to the point of asking for help.

By asking members to commit to come back to the site once a month, the company doesn't have to constantly pay google or other traffic sources to acquire members, and to have prices like this you have to keep costs low. That's the deal.

I somehow never managed to lose track of my childhood dreams, but instead I'm constantly preventing myself from accomplishing them. Good luck on your internet diet.

Zynga is another example; I'm sure I wasn't the only one constantly bombarded with invites to Whateverville. I had to unfriend some people to avoid them, because there was no way to turn them off.

I remember hitting refresh constantly on /. during 911.

These sorts of bloggers constantly talk about 'changing the world' but ultimately they aren't promoting people to build useful products and services, but to step up and join the blogging wealthy. Are there people making good money blogging?

I don't remember seeing CL down or even slow - no cutesy "site is down" pages - which says to me they're improving the site constantly, just not in the way that gets the hypeosphere excited.

It's a very common theme in startup-land, and I constantly hear from founders who sacrificed their marriages, worked 19 hour days, slept under their desks, and racked up tens of thousands in credit card debt, all to make their dream a reality. The message is very clear: you have to be willing to do anything to succeed.

I lived there for one year, before moving to SF and while everybody told me I should constantly be watching my back, I mostly ignored it and was fine. But after I moved to SF, I found myself in Oakland for a party and sure enough, with a couple friends, I got myself mugged at gunpoint by three scary-looking local gangsters.

Renting out something as private as my primary place of residence just seems like a generally bad idea, especially when I am not around to constantly check in on it. Even if I got to meet them, and they seemed like nice people whats to stop them from leaving without paying if they accidentally broke my TV ?

I saw it constantly and eventually understood it as a lack of interpersonal barriers that arise in a highly individualistic society. Everything is shared because in a city of 15-20 million people, there's hardly any space apart.

They just want to cash out so that they can have their financial freedom and then go out of the limelight and back to doing the same things they enjoy but without having to constantly worry about job security and putting food on the table. Notch achieved this in the most spectacular way possible and I think he handled it perfectly.

Also, it is worth noting that for the last 20 years Fingleton has constantly harped on the fact that Japan has a trade surplus, sometimes a very large trade surplus, and he thinks this represents economic strength. Numerous economists have made the point that a large trade surplus can be a sign of economic weakness: perpetual insufficient demand at home in the domestic market.

Constantly definitions

adverb

without variation or change, in every case; "constantly kind and gracious"; "he always arrives on time"

See also: invariably always

adverb

without interruption; "the world is constantly changing"

See also: always forever perpetually incessantly