Incessant in a sentence as an adjective

It's the incessant nature of it that hurts.

> just because of your incessant, annoying spam on every god damnsent from my iphone.

Ever; just because of your incessant, annoying spam on every god damn forum I ever go to.

Amazing that good products sell on their own, and don't need incessant moralizing about buying local.

I'd certainly enjoy a break from the incessant yammering of humanity.

I'm not sure what this will do for the AirBnB founder's reputation, but the pattern of incessant whining from Greenspan certainly has lowered my opinion of him.

PostgreSQL people themselves have been playing into the hands of corporate FUDders with their incessant and inappropriate peddling.

It's funny, a couple of years ago I was reading articles about how Google's design teams were supposedly hamstrung by their culture of incessant testing.

How is "asking for a better representative on the information security front" a metaphor?The incessant misuse of the word literally, literally makes my blood boil.

I've seen this mentioned before - using a tremendous number of IP addresses across a tremendous number of sites and over a massive length of time to perform a very low-grade incessant brute-force attack.

As a semi-unrelated note, as someone who has to watch a lot of near east homemade "terrorist" videos, this video gives a great western corollary to the incessant "Allahu Akbar" that is chanted throughout those videos.

When I lived in New Mexico for a bunch of years, there was one constant - the incessant back and forth of the trains carrying coal containers from one end of the country to the other, and on the return trip carrying giant walmart containers shipped from China to the US ports, to their destinations in the rest of the mainland US.

To quote Madison:"It will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is to-day, can guess what it will be to-morrow.

Incessant definitions

adjective

uninterrupted in time and indefinitely long continuing; "the ceaseless thunder of surf"; "in constant pain"; "night and day we live with the incessant noise of the city"; "the never-ending search for happiness"; "the perpetual struggle to maintain standards in a democracy"; "man's unceasing warfare with drought and isolation"; "unremitting demands of hunger"

See also: ceaseless constant never-ending perpetual unceasing unremitting