0 lasting; not temporary -- permanent; varig
After many years of travelling, they made a permanent home in England.
At the same time, the opportunities available are often for casual work rather than permanent positions.
The truce also provided for the continuation of discussions about a permanent peace between the two realms.
The language of science is in a state of permanent semantic revolution.
A person's domicile is the country which is in fact or in the eye of the law his permanent home for the time being.
There was also a lot of resistance to moving from the church to a new permanent home.
They can not live in permanent assembly, to provide the drive for history, but must delegate to specialist office-holders.
His colouring might then have been as true and permanent, as it is now clear, beautiful and deceitful.
Ecclesiastical institutions emerged, gradually transformed into a permanent diocesan organisation in the course of the following century.