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Frequently

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Possible Answers:
Often.

Last seen on: Daily Celebrity Crossword – 5/3/23 Wayback Wednesday

Random information on the term ” Frequently”:

The continuous and progressive aspects (abbreviated CONT and PROG) are grammatical aspects that express incomplete action (“to do”) or state (“to be”) in progress at a specific time: they are non-habitual, imperfective aspects.

In the grammars of many languages the two terms are used interchangeably. This is also the case with English: a construction such as “He is washing” may be described either as present continuous or as present progressive. However, there are certain languages for which two different aspects are distinguished. In Chinese, for example, progressive aspect denotes a current action, as in “he is getting dressed”, while continuous aspect denotes a current state, as in “he is wearing fine clothes”.

As with other grammatical categories, the precise semantics of the aspects vary from language to language, and from grammarian to grammarian. For example, some grammars of Turkish count the -iyor form as a present tense; some as a progressive tense; and some as both a continuous (nonhabitual imperfective) and a progressive (continuous non-stative) aspect.

Frequently on Wikipedia

Random information on the term ” Often”:

Alternative R&B (also referred to as alt-R&B, indie R&B, left-field R&B, and originally known as PBR&B, hipster R&B, or R-Neg-B) is a term used by music journalists to describe a stylistic alternative to contemporary R&B that began in the mid 2000s and came to prominence with musical artists such as Frank Ocean, The Weeknd, SZA, Khalid, and others. It is considered to be “more progressive and diverse” than its mainstream counterpart.

“Alternative R&B” was once used by the music industry during the late 1990s[original research?] to market neo soul artists, such as D’Angelo, Erykah Badu, and Maxwell. There has been a variety of discussion about the differing genre terms, with several critics describing the music under the broad category of “alternative R&B” or “indie R&B”. The term “hipster R&B” has been commonly used, as has the term “PBR&B”—a combination of “PBR” (the abbreviation for Pabst Blue Ribbon, a beer most recently associated with the hipster subculture) and R&B. The first use of “PBR&B” was on Twitter by Sound of the City writer Eric Harvey on a 2011 post. Three years later, amazed and distressed at how far the term—meant as a joke—had traveled, Harvey wrote an extensive essay about it for Pitchfork. Slate suggests the name “R-Neg-B”, as a reference to “negging”. The genre has sometimes been called “noir&B”.[21][22] However, the terms are often criticized for “pigeonholing” artists into hipster subculture and being used in a derisive manner.[23][24]

Often on Wikipedia

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