[syn: dogged, dour, persistent, pertinacious, tenacious, unyielding]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Persistent \Per*sist"ent\, a. [L. persistens, -entis, p. pr. of
persistere. See Persist.]
1. Inclined to persist; having staying qualities; tenacious
of position or purpose.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Biol.) Remaining beyond the period when parts of the same
kind sometimes fall off or are absorbed; permanent; as,
persistent teeth or gills; a persistent calyx; -- opposed
to deciduous, and caducous.
[1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
persistent
adj 1: never-ceasing; "the relentless beat of the drums" [syn:
persistent, relentless, unrelenting]
2: continually recurring to the mind; "haunting memories"; "the
cathedral organ and the distant voices have a haunting
beauty"- Claudia Cassidy [syn: haunting, persistent]
3: retained; not shed; "persistent leaves remain attached past
maturity"; "the persistent gills of fishes" [syn:
persistent, lasting] [ant: caducous, shed]
4: stubbornly unyielding; "dogged persistence"; "dour
determination"; "the most vocal and pertinacious of all the
critics"; "a mind not gifted to discover truth but tenacious
to hold it"- T.S.Eliot; "men tenacious of opinion" [syn:
dogged, dour, persistent, pertinacious, tenacious,
unyielding]
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 January 2023):
persistence
persistent
1. A property of a programming language where
created objects and variables continue to exist and retain
their values between runs of the program.
2. The length of time a phosphor dot on the screen
of a cathode ray tube will remain illuminated after it has
been energised by the electron beam. Long-persistence
phosphors reduce flicker, but generate ghost-like images that
linger on screen for a fraction of a second.
(1994-11-09)