the super cute girl's arm was contiguous with the boy's arm, and he was very excited about it.
You answered your own question. There are the Continental United States , or contiguous states, and the non-contiguous States . Although Alaska is continental , it touches no other state.
Maine is the easternmost state in the contiguous 48 states of the US.
The two states that are outside the contiguous US are Alaska and Hawaii.
The two states that are not one of the 48 contiguous states are Alaska and Hawaii.
Contiguous means that their borders are touching the continental US. Alaska and Hawaii do not touch the mainland.
"is my disease contiguous
Contiguous means touching. Alaska is not one of the contiguous states.
Four parcels of land have contiguous borders
the southern ocean is contiguous with the atlantic
I live in one of the contiguous United States.
Contiguous is an adjective describing things that share a common border, are touching, or things together in a sequence. Example: The United States and Canada share a contiguous border.
That girl at the doctors office was very contaguous!
The contiguous United States does not include Alaska and Hawaii. Contiguous means adjacent; touching; right next to; consecutive; sequential; or close together, but not touching. Contiguous events are adjacent in time. Contiguous memory locations are right next to each other in address space, as in (3), (4), (5). In computer terminology, contiguous is sometimes distinguished from consecutive or continuous, because 'continuous' or 'consecutive' could apply in absolute addressing, but possibly may not apply in virtual space or relative [indirect] addressing.
An organism is any contiguous living system, such as animal, fungus, or plant.
Contiguous means that two or more physical areas share a common border, such as two neighbouring countries such as France and Spain or Portugal and Spain. Non-contiguous means that there is no shared or common border, as is the case between France and Portugal.
My research shows that usage of "contiguous to" has greatly exceeded "contiguous with" for several centuries until relatively recently. Usage of "contiguous to" still exceeds "contiguous with," but by a very narrow margin. Try plugging these into a Google n-gram and you'll see the usage history since 1800.
My research shows that usage of "contiguous to" has greatly exceeded "contiguous with" for several centuries until relatively recently. Usage of "contiguous to" still exceeds "contiguous with," but by a very narrow margin. Try plugging these into a Google n-gram and you'll see the usage history since 1800.