Continuing in a sentence as an adjective

The continuing attempt at justifying the attitude is a bad, bad sign.

However, mobile CPCs are less than desktop CPCs, and the query mix is continuing to shift to mobile.

Let's be clear, he threatened to sue us for not continuing to perform on a contract that he himself asked to be canceled.

"Nevertheless, I do believe that we are seeing a continuing trend downward in overall article quality on the front page.

Our largest competitor, run by Karl Denninger, did us a continuing series of favors by pissing off their customers.

Once a few big companies release Android apps with a sub-par design, other companies see this and follow suit, continuing the trend forwards.

[1] 'call the vote' - in parlimentary terms when continuing debate will not help you make a better decision, it is time to stop debate and to vote on the decsion.

You were fortunate to recognize that MongoDB was the wrong tool for your job, and lucky to be able to move to Postgres instead of continuing to throw your time and effort away.

With the constant trade and monopoly prices, I was able to further entrench my dominant position each month by continuing to out bid any other doctor who tried to purchase avian meat.

He clearly has something to say, and I would love nothing more than to hear more discussion like this in our national politics, instead of continuing to take a cargo-cult approach towards heaping benefits on the wealthiest class.

But, it's probably not worth continuing to pay them $250,000 to design completely impractical algorithms nobody can realistically implement, including themselves, either.

So, [Clapper] said, he was continuing to assert the state\n secrets privilege, which allows the government to seek \n to block information from being used in court even if \n that means the case must be dismissed.\n\nIt's almost funny to see the administration's hypocrisy on full display.

Continuing definitions

adjective

remaining in force or being carried on without letup; "the act provided a continuing annual appropriation"; "the continuing struggle to put food on the table"

adjective

of long duration; "chronic money problems"

See also: chronic