Continuous vs Diatessaron - What's the difference?
continuous | diatessaron |
Without break, cessation, or interruption; without intervening time.
* 1847 , , Ticknor and Fields (1854), page 90:
Without intervening space; continued; protracted; extended.
(botany) Not deviating or varying from uniformity; not interrupted; not joined or articulated.
(analysis, of a function) Such that, for every x'' in the domain, for each small open interval ''D'' about ''f''(''x''), there's an interval containing ''x'' whose image is in ''D .
(mathematics, more generally, of a function) Such that each open set in the range has an open preimage.
(grammar) Expressing an ongoing action or state.
(music, obsolete) The interval of a fourth.
(theology) A continuous narrative arranged from the first four books of the New Testament.
(obsolete) An electuary compounded of four medicines.
(Webster 1913)
----
As an adjective continuous
is without break, cessation, or interruption; without intervening time.As a noun diatessaron is
(music|obsolete) the interval of a fourth.continuous
English
Adjective
(-)- a continuous current of electricity
- he can hear its continuous murmur
- a continuous line of railroad
- Each continuous function from the real line to the rationals is constant, since the rationals are totally disconnected.
