0 present or noticeable in every part of a thing or place:
Reforms are being undermined by the all-pervasive corruption in the country.
Why is government corruption more pervasive in some societies than in others?
Coordination failures are pervasive in financial markets and institutions.
This paradigm continues to dominate, implicitly or explicitly, the thinking of the democracy community, so pervasive have its precepts become.
The language of consensus is pervasive in virtually all political communication.
As the role of the church grew within the state, religious imagery became a pervasive feature of everyday life.
Unfortunately, as agents have not been as universally pervasive as objects, there is not the maturity in agent oriented design.
First, it is possible that media effects are deeper, subtler and more pervasive than the sorts of things measured in this article.
Our working hypothesis is that, in the software engineering of context-aware pervasive systems, situation abstraction is useful.