Roger Woodham replies:Continual and continuous

Both adjectival forms, continual and continuous, mean without stopping or without a break. They are often used interchangeably:

In certain contexts only continuous is possible because continual here would imply that breaks are possible. In these examples, there are clearly no breaks, so continuous is preferred:

When we want to describe things that happen repeatedly, continual is preferred:

continually - continuously

The adverbial forms, continually and continuously, are often interchangeable.

But when the meaning is clearly very often, rather than without a break, continually is preferred:

Here, continually is behaving as an adverb of frequency, cf. always, all the time, constantly. If we arranged such adverbs along a continuum of frequency, starting with least often and ending with most often, it would read: