How to Use unceasing in a Sentence

unceasing

adjective
  • The beauty of the people and the place overwhelmed me, as did the unceasing clamor of street life.
    Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 26 Mar. 2020
  • But perhaps not enough is made of Nadal’s mind, and its unceasing focus.
    Gerald Marzorati, The New Yorker, 9 June 2019
  • His tale features what should be engrossing and unceasing turns of the screw.
    David Benedict, Variety, 29 Sep. 2022
  • Critics argue that the current of men losing their jobs is unceasing, that this tidal wave is all too much.
    Hillary Kelly, Glamour, 12 Jan. 2018
  • News is an unceasing river, no longer the province of the weekly newsmagazine or intoned at the same hour each weeknight.
    Melissa Holbrook Pierson, WSJ, 2 Jan. 2022
  • And after seven years of unceasing sorrow, who can blame them?
    Jihan Crowther, Esquire, 15 May 2017
  • Yet the potential gains are huge, so there is an unceasing demand for more and better data.
    Autopia Blog, WIRED, 2 Mar. 2011
  • For the sixth month in a row, the city of Rio de Janeiro has seen more deaths than births -- a devastating indicator of Brazil's unceasing Covid-19 crisis.
    Angela Dewan, CNN, 14 Apr. 2021
  • The panoptic awareness created by virality is an Eye of Sauron, a lidless and unceasing glare that will follow you to the ends of the earth.
    WIRED, 1 Dec. 2022
  • And, as always, there remains the unceasing optimism of arguably the most upbeat presence in the locker room.
    Ira Winderman, Sun-Sentinel.com, 7 May 2018
  • In these leaking huts, where the dead and the dying lie huddled together, unceasing prayers are being offered up to Our Lady of Pity . . .
    John Maxwell Hamilton, National Geographic, 16 Apr. 2019
  • Law-abiding black men should, for the sake of their race, be foremost in relentless and unceasing warfare against lawbreaking black men.
    Fortune, 11 Mar. 2020
  • An unceasing invasion of mass tourism threatens to turn Paris into a vast open-air theme park for the global affluent.
    Adam Nossiter, New York Times, 5 Oct. 2019
  • That and the backbreaking, unceasing nature of farm work — the rituals of the rural year from planting seeds to milking cows and harvesting wheat.
    Kenneth Turan, latimes.com, 10 May 2018
  • Then their lives come to an end, like dozens of others every year in Indianapolis, in an unceasing epidemic of road killings.
    Kayla Dwyer, The Indianapolis Star, 10 Aug. 2022
  • In the meantime, daily life has become an unceasing struggle.
    Molly Hennessy-Fiske, latimes.com, 27 Sep. 2017
  • Topping the dry ridgetop behind it, a modern array of giant white turbines turned slowly in an unceasing wind.
    Bill Thorness, The Seattle Times, 16 Aug. 2017
  • Surely not even half the people who’ve been in love have endured such extensive and unceasing analysis.
    Morgan Parker, ELLE, 4 June 2022
  • For another, one of Mills’ points is that life’s unceasing jumble has a way of creating its own strange patterns and recurrences.
    Los Angeles Times, 3 Sep. 2021
  • Efforts to fight bias often clash with corporate culture and the unceasing push to build new technology, get it out the door and start making money.
    New York Times, 30 June 2021
  • Cox devotes equal space to the unceasing protests of Black communities to their every appearance.
    Eric Herschthal, The New Republic, 9 Aug. 2021
  • There is one export, though, that is far less celebrated: the unceasing torrent of outbound campaign cash.
    Seema Mehta, latimes.com, 30 June 2017
  • The insult stung but was outweighed in its impact by the love of her parents and their unceasing efforts to cultivate her imagination.
    Washington Post, 5 Apr. 2022
  • Some students remembered the unceasing screams of children calling for help, or the sight of peers wailing over seemingly lifeless friends.
    New York Times, 28 June 2022
  • But what happens when the demands are larger, or just irritating and unceasing?
    Dan Duray, Town & Country, 20 May 2019
  • In the half-century leading up to the New Deal, Populists and Progressives waged an unceasing, multi-front war against the only legalized form of monopoly: the patent.
    Alexander Zaitchik, The New Republic, 24 Aug. 2020
  • The United States then lent Europe $12 billion with the Marshall plan, which began an unceasing flood of dollars into the global economy.
    Robin Kaiser-Schatzlein, The New Republic, 6 Jan. 2020
  • Exhausted by the blinding, unceasing focus on finding her next fix.
    Matthew Glowicki, The Courier-Journal, 21 Sep. 2017
  • There are trillions of atoms in each cell and trillions of cells in the human body, all interacting with each other in an unceasing biological dance.
    Kevin Dowd, Forbes, 31 Oct. 2021
  • These networks can sprawl over tens or even hundreds of meters and are subject to an unceasing flood of sensory information.
    Gareth Cook, Scientific American, 24 June 2020

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unceasing.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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