¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Habituated
1. habituate [v] - See also: habituate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Habituated
Literary usage of Habituated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The London Magazine by John Scott, John Taylor (1827)
"... with it* cloudless sky, to the dingy gloom of a London street, no wonder a
damp should be cast over the ethereal spirits of those habituated to the ..."
2. The Talisman: A Tale of the Crusaders by Walter Scott (1878)
"A handful of dates, and a morsel of coarse barley-bread, sufficed to relieve the
hunger of the latter, whose education had habituated him to the fare of the ..."
3. The Port Folio by Joseph Dennie (1809)
"The French, on the contrary, had been habituated to a severe and vigilant
government, perhaps necessary to control their quick sensations, ardent passions ..."
4. The History of Modern Europe: With an Account of the Decline and Fall of the by William Russell (1802)
"... (the labours of husbandry among them being few) habituated them to the use of
arms, and hardened them to the endurance of toil, without greatly wasting ..."
5. The Psychology of Childhood by Naomi Norsworthy, Mary Theodora Whitley (1918)
"habituated action. — The fourth fundamental in morality is action. In fact morality
is in its very essence, action, and, moreover, habits of action rather ..."
6. The History of the Church of Christ: From the Days of the Apostles, Till the by Joseph Milner (1835)
"Yet there still live in my memory the images of evils, to which I had been
habituated, and they occur to me even in sleep. Is not thy hand, 0 God, ..."