Automatic prolongations are like when your favorite toy keeps playing by itself, even after you stop pressing the buttons.
Imagine you have a robot dog that barks every time you press its tail. But one day, you notice that even after you let go of the tail, it keeps barking for a little while, almost like it’s remembering you pressed it! That's an automatic prolongation: the robot dog continues doing something on its own because it got started by your action.
Like a Bouncing Ball
Think about when you bounce a ball. At first, you have to throw it up to make it go. But once it starts bouncing, it keeps going, by itself, until it stops. That’s like how automatic prolongations work: something gets going because of an action you did, and then it continues on its own for a little while.
Why It Happens
Inside the robot dog (or your toy), there's a kind of memory that helps it keep doing things even after you stop. Just like how you might still be thinking about a fun game even after you've stopped playing, your toy is doing something similar!
Examples
- A rental agreement automatically renews every year unless the tenant says no.
- Your phone plan keeps going month after month because it's set to auto-renew.
- You keep getting charged for a gym membership you forgot about.
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See also
- What are Futures Contracts?
- What are cases?
- Does saying "sorry" after an accident count as legal admission of fault?
- What are portability clauses?
- What are long-term contracts?