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1 consecutive
[kən'sekjutiv](following one after the other in regular order: He visited us on two consecutive days, Thursday and Friday.) consecutivo* * *con.sec.u.tive[kəns'ekjutiv] adj consecutivo, sucessivo. -
2 consecutive
[kən'sekjutiv](following one after the other in regular order: He visited us on two consecutive days, Thursday and Friday.) consecutivo
См. также в других словарях:
consecutive — [kən sek′yo͞o tiv, kən sek′yətiv] adj. [Fr consécutif < ML consecutivus < pp. of L consequi: see CONSEQUENCE] 1. following in order, without interruption; successive [for four consecutive days] 2. proceeding from one part or idea to the… … English World dictionary
consecutive — 01. The teacher had to speak to the student after he was late for class for three [consecutive] days. 02. The Montreal Canadiens hockey team won four [consecutive] Stanley Cups between 1956 and 1960, and four more [consecutive] championships from … Grammatical examples in English
consecutive — con|sec|u|tive [ kən sekjətıv ] adjective following one after another in order and with nothing else in between: He s been late now on three consecutive days. her fifth consecutive defeat ╾ con|sec|u|tive|ly adverb: We work for twelve days… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
consecutive — UK [kənˈsekjʊtɪv] / US [kənˈsekjətɪv] adjective following one after another in order and with nothing else in between He s been late now on three consecutive days. her fifth consecutive defeat Derived word: consecutively adverb Most of the staff… … English dictionary
Days of week on Hebrew calendar — The modern Hebrew calendar has been designed to ensure that certain holy days and festivals do not fall on certain days of the week. As a result, there are only four possible patterns of days on which festivals can fall. (Note that Jewish days… … Wikipedia
consecutive — con|sec|u|tive [kənˈsekjutıv] adj [Date: 1600 1700; : French; Origin: consecutif, from Latin consequi; CONSEQUENT] consecutive numbers or periods of time follow one after the other without any interruptions ▪ It had rained for four consecutive… … Dictionary of contemporary English
consecutive — adjective consecutive numbers or periods of time follow one after the other without any interruptions: It had rained for four consecutive days. consecutively adverb: Number the pages consecutively … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
consecutive — adjective share prices fell for three consecutive days Syn: successive, succeeding, following, in succession, running, in a row, one after the other, back to back, continuous, straight, uninterrupted … Thesaurus of popular words
Days of Wine and Roses and Other TV Requests — Studio album by Andy Williams Released 1963 … Wikipedia
consecutive — [[t]kənse̱kjʊtɪv[/t]] ADJ: usu ADJ n Consecutive periods of time or events happen one after the other without interruption. The Cup was won for the third consecutive year by the Toronto Maple Leafs... Photographs taken at the same time on two… … English dictionary
running days — Consecutive days including Saturdays, Sundays, and Bank Holidays. In chartering a vessel the period of the charter is given in running days, rather than working days. product current stock demand rate run out time (units) (units week) (weeks)A… … Big dictionary of business and management