Continuum in a sentence as a noun

This trial seems to be a continuum of those crack downs.

Well, it can actually be a tough call... because it's all on a continuum.

There exists a continuum of SaaS sales strategies.

If you want to look at it as a dichotomy, sure, but can't we agree that there's a continuum here?

It's a continuum... and that's not even considering that saying "restrictive" raise the issue of "restrictive for who?

This is only a little bit weirder on the continuum of what we already do for pop starlets, both in Japan and the United States.

Death threats and sexual harassment are only the showy, extreme points of a very wide continuum of discrimination.

The "green user names" might be nicer if it was a continuum -- that is, "newest possible" would be bright green, and it would fade to gray over the course of days or weeks.

That isn't a "get into the NFL then win the Superbowl" goal, that is a "get into college" goal on the relative-risk-of-total-failure continuum.

These aren't just theoretical things - I've heard people use them as examples of "openness".Of course "open" is a continuum, but there are ways that Android is "open" that really matter.

Can anyone be surprised when Apple protects this as something they want to implement?I think that as an app developer, you have to consider this continuum when you set out to develop an app.

Scala's heavy emphasis on seamless interop with Java makes it a sort of up to the programmer to place their style on the continuum between something like Java and something like ML.

I think one of the keys to understanding garbage collection is to understand that it is on a continuum of memory management techniques, and the line is a great deal less bright and shining than people often realize.

There are of course other reasons to be somewhere else on the continuum, like real identities with some freedom of presentation like nicknames, full pseudonymous identities, or full anonymity.

Continuum definitions

noun

a continuous nonspatial whole or extent or succession in which no part or portion is distinct or distinguishable from adjacent parts