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perennially
[ puh-ren-ee-uh-lee ]
adverb
- perpetually, repeatedly, or continually; throughout the year or years:
For our main dish I suggest salmon, which is perennially popular.
Many rural dwellers are not located along perennially flowing river channels.
- year after year, without needing to be replanted:
Chives are a member of the onion (allium) family and grow perennially.
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of perennially1
Example Sentences
“Today” ratings perennially shoot up in December after the Christmas tree in Rockefeller Plaza goes up.
Beckett is perennially timely because his works concern themselves with those eternal questions that the political emergencies of the day cannot override.
This isn’t the first time the show — perennially under pressure to trim its often bloated runtime — has dispensed with the original song performances.
In “The Delta Star,” an immense, perennially angry officer known as The Bad Czech chases down a petty thief in downtown L.A. and futilely tries to hang him from a fire escape.
Josh's prediction: Preston are perennially fine in the Championship - I can't remember the last time they changed division and they must be quite a boring club to support.
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