for·ev·er /fəˈrɛvɚ/
(ad.)永遠,常常
For·ev·er adv.
1. Through eternity; through endless ages; eternally.
2. At all times; always.
Note: ☞ In England, for and ever are usually written and printed as two separate words; but, in the United States, the general practice is to make but a single word of them.
Forever and ever, an emphatic “forever.”
Syn: -- Constantly; continually; invariably; unchangeably; incessantly; always; perpetually; unceasingly; ceaselessly; interminably; everlastingly; endlessly; eternally.
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forever
adv 1: for a limitless time; "no one can live forever"; "brightly
beams our Father's mercy from his lighthouse
evermore"- P.P.Bliss [syn: everlastingly, eternally,
evermore]
2: seemingly without interruption; often and repeatedly;
"always looking for faults"; "it is always raining"; "he
is forever cracking jokes"; "they are forever arguing"
[syn: always]
3: for a very long or seemingly endless time; "she took forever
to write the paper"; "we had to wait forever and a day"
[syn: forever and a day]