nt]
| 1. | not changing or varying; uniform; regular; invariable: All conditions during the three experiments were constant. |
| 2. | continuing without pause or letup; unceasing: constant noise. |
| 3. | regularly recurrent; continual; persistent: He found it impossible to work with constant interruption. |
| 4. | faithful; unswerving in love, devotion, etc.: a constant lover. |
| 5. | steadfast; firm in mind or purpose; resolute. |
| 6. | Obsolete. certain; confident. |
| 7. | something that does not or cannot change or vary. |
| 8. | Physics. a number expressing a property, quantity, or relation that remains unchanged under specified conditions. |
| 9. | Mathematics. a quantity assumed to be unchanged throughout a given discussion. |

con·stant (kŏn'stənt) adj.
[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin cōnstāns, cōnstant-, present participle of cōnstāre, to stand firm : com-, intensive pref.; see com- + stāre, to stand; see stā- in Indo-European roots.] con'stant·ly adv. |
A number that appears in equations and formulas and does not vary or change. Examples are Planck's constant and the speed of light.
constant con·stant (kŏn'stənt)
adj.
Continually occurring; persistent.
Unchanging in nature, value, or extent; invariable.
A quantity assumed to have a fixed value in a specified mathematical context.
An experimental or theoretical condition, factor, or quantity that does not vary or that is regarded as invariant in specified circumstances.
constant (kŏn'stənt) Pronunciation Key
|