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Continuity vs Continuation - What's the difference?

continuity | continuation |

As nouns the difference between continuity and continuation

is that continuity is lack of interruption or disconnection; the quality of being continuous in space or time while continuation is the act or state of continuing; the state of being continued; uninterrupted extension or succession; prolongation; propagation.

continuity

English

Noun

  • Lack of interruption or disconnection; the quality of being continuous in space or time.
  • Considerable continuity of attention is needed to read German philosophy.
  • (uncountable, mathematics) A characteristic property of a continuous function.
  • *
  • A narrative device in episodic fiction where previous and/or future events in a story series are accounted for in present stories.
  • * {{quote-news
  • , year=2012 , date=April 29 , author=Nathan Rabin , title=TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “Treehouse of Horror III” (season 4, episode 5; originally aired 10/29/1992) citation , page= , passage=In “Treehouse Of Horror” episodes, the rules aren’t just different—they don’t even exist. If writers want Homer to kill Flanders or for a segment to end with a marriage between a woman and a giant ape, they can do so without worrying about continuity or consistency or fans griping that the gang is behaving out of character.}}

    Antonyms

    * discontinuity

    Derived terms

    * discontinuity * sequential continuity * uniform continuity

    continuation

    English

    Noun

    (wikipedia continuation) (en noun)
  • The act or state of continuing; the state of being continued; uninterrupted extension or succession; prolongation; propagation.
  • That which extends, increases, supplements, or carries on.
  • the continuation of a story
    The series' continuation was commercially if not artistically successful.
  • (computing) A representation of an execution state of a program at a certain point in time, which may be used at a later time to resume the execution of the program from that point.
  • (basketball) A successful shot that, despite a foul, is made with a single continuous motion beginning before the foul, and that is therefore valid in certain forms of basketball.
  • Antonyms

    * (act or state of continuing or being continued) termination, discontinuation