(f. UNINTERRUPTED.)
1665. J. Sergeant, Sure Footing, 106. The ever-continuance or uninterruptedness of Tradition.
1671. Flavel, Fount. Life, ii. 4. The Perpetuity and uninterruptedness thereof.
1791. Washington, Lett., Writ. 1892, XII. 46. My return to this place is sooner than I expected, owing to the uninterruptedness of my journey.
1834. J. W. Croker, in C. Papers, 11 June. The musicians spoiled that uninterruptedness (what a word) which was so beautiful yesterday.
1876. Carpenter, in Contemp. Rev., Jan. The Scientific Theist looks at the uninterruptedness of this order [in Nature] as the highest evidence of its original perfection.