continue+to+live
51live — I v 1. be alive, have life, be, exist, have being, walk the earth; breathe, respire; arise, rise, originate, quicken, come forth, appear, see light, come into existence. 2. subsist, remain alive, cling to life, survive, outlive; keep a hold on,… …
52Live and Learn — Infobox Album | Name = Live and Learn Type = Studio album Artist = Elkie Brooks Released = 1979 (UK) Recorded = 1979 Genre = Rock/Funk/Pop/Soul Length = Label = A M Records Producer = Jerry Leiber Mike Stoller Last album = Shooting Star (1978)… …
53Live en Martinique — Jean Philippe Marthély Pour les articles homonymes, voir Ciccone …
54Live Well Network — Création 27 avril 2009 Propriétaire Disney ABC Television Group Slogan It s about Time. It s about You. Langue anglais Pays États Unis …
55continue — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. persist; keep, go, carry, run, or hold on; maintain, keep up, sustain, uphold; prolong, remain, last, endure, withstand; protract, persevere, be permanent, stay, stick, abide; resume. See durability,… …
56ˌlive ˈon — phrasal verb to continue to be alive, or to continue to exist These traditions live on in the villages in the mountains.[/ex] …
57Live -Europe '83 — Infobox Album Name = Live Europe 83 Type = Live album Artist = Joan Baez Released = January 1984 Recorded = various dates on 1983 European concert tour Genre = Folk Length = 50:42 Label = Ariola Producer = Gerard Tempesti Reviews = *Allmusic… …
58LIVE — Left Ventricular Hypertrophy: Indapamide vs Enalapril [trial] * * * live liv vi, lived; liv·ing 1) to be alive: have the life of an animal or plant 2) to continue alive <lived for 50 years> 3) to maintain oneself <lives on a vegetarian… …
59live — [OE] Modern English live represents a conflation of two Old English verbs, libban and lifian, both of which go back ultimately to the same prehistoric Germanic source, *lib ‘remain, continue’. Variants of this produced leave ‘depart’ and life.… …
60live — [OE] Modern English live represents a conflation of two Old English verbs, libban and lifian, both of which go back ultimately to the same prehistoric Germanic source, *lib ‘remain, continue’. Variants of this produced leave ‘depart’ and life.… …