consecutively [
kən'sekjutivli]
ad. 连续地
consecutively[ adv ]
in a consecutive manner
<adv.all>
he was consecutively ill, then well, then ill again
Consecutively \Con*sec"u*tive*ly\, adv.
In a consecutive manner; by way of sequence; successively.
- In fact, 28 of them, run consecutively, like a long prison sentence.
- Latrone, who ordered the sentences to run consecutively, explained that he chose life in prison over the death penalty on the first murder count because of a mitigating circumstance _ the lack of a previous record.
- He faces a maximum of 25 years on each rape conviction, and Ahearn said he would request the maximum on each count to run consecutively.
- There is almost nothing juicy about the two women who (consecutively) botched killing themselves with revolvers when he left them for other melo-molls.
- The judge ordered that the sentences be served consecutively.
- As part of the plea bargain reached about 10 days earlier, Bennett said, federal prosecutors would recommend that Gates receive a five-year sentence to be served consecutively to his five-year sentence on state charges for manslaughter by locomotive.
- He was a predator, completely insensitive." The judge sentenced Bloom to four years on each count and, in an unusual move, ordered the prison terms to run consecutively as spectators in the crowded courtroom gasped.
- Edelstein sentenced Bloom to four years on each count and, ordered the terms to run consecutively.
- The sentences were five years to be served consecutively.
- The federal term ordered Friday by U.S. District Judge Norman Ramsey will be served consecutively.