From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishnever-endingˌnever-ˈending adjective CONTINUE/NOT STOPseeming to continue for a very long time SYN endless Keeping the house neat and clean is a never-ending battle.► see thesaurus at permanent
Examples from the Corpus
never-ending• To Miguel, the boredom of married life seemed never-ending.• I saw it as a never-ending drain on our meagre stock of rope and timber.• The descent is never-ending - I am glad - until Tony comes towards me.• People went in and out of her home in a never-ending procession.• His was a never-ending search for a fix.• They are a kind of a never-ending source of amusement, amazement, and discouragement.• The youngsters, ages 2 to 17, provide a never-ending source of story lines.• That is the latest bizarre instalment in the never-ending story of extraordinary events at Underhill.• Their life had become a never-ending trudge to keep the Looms of the necromancer weaving dreadful enchantments.