Habitual in english

Habitual

pronunciation: həbɪtʃuəl part of speech: adjective
In gestures

habitual = commonplace ; chronic ; customary ; habitualized ; inveterate ; prevalent ; hardened ; habitual. 

Example: Microfilm and microfiche formats are now commonplace in most libraries.Example: Stress is an inescapable fact of life and the reason one of every four persons suffers from chronic stress response is because people waste time.Example: What I'm getting at is this: At least in the CIP entry that I have seen, LC, following customary practice, made a title entry for the main title, 'Women in Librarianship', but nothing under Melvil's 'Rib Symposium'.Example: Habitualized actions, they further suggest, become embedded in human behavior and provide the psychological gain of narrowing choices.Example: As an inveterate user of the British Museum Library he was able to confirm that 'a library is not worth anything without a catalogue'.Example: Pre-co-ordinate indexes are particular prevalent as printed indexes.Example: There is a shift from considering children as innocent victims to viewing them as hardened criminals on a par with adults who commit similar acts.Example: A new study confirms that male gender, obesity, and weight gain are key determinants of habitual snoring in the adult population.

more:

» bebedor habitualhabitual drinker .

Example: Though the condition is not common in occasional drinkers, habitual drinkers may develop withdrawal symptoms, when they attempt to stop drinking alcohol.

» cliente habitualhabituéloyal patronregular .

Example: Morris writes rhapsodically about celebrity-studded parties, roistering interludes with major writers and artists, as well as gossip-column habitues.

Example: The place gave him good vibes, became friends with the owner, Tracy, and he's been among the cafe's loyal patrons since.

Example: We have a great bunch of regulars who make the journey from all over London, often just to say hello and indulge in a pulled pork or a beef burger.

» como es habitualas always .

Example: As always, our members are ready to speak out clearly if the Cuban authorities dare to seize any of the uncensored books being sent to Cuba by President Carter.

» de un modo habitualas a matter of routine .

Example: In many industrial and governmental libraries this kind of 'repackaging' is often an absolute requirement of the clients, who may with certain enquiries expect the librarian to select and digest the raw information for them as a matter of routine.

» dieta habitualstaple diet .

Example: It was part of the staple diet of Native Americans and early settlers because it was so chockfull of health.

» fumador habitualhabitual smoker .

Example: Now, I want to pause for a moment to make a distinction between the habitual smoker (addict) and the occasional smoker (the guy who has a couple cigars per year, or smokes a pipe once in a blue moon).

» lector poco habituallight reader .

Example: Male heavy and light readers are found to have value systems so discrepant as to constitute almost distinct subcultures.

» normas habitualesstandard practices .

Example: Despite a 20-year effort to develop a code for the description and cataloguing of art objects, the art world has not yet developed standard practices for these functions.

» poco habitualunaccustomed .

Example: He bombards the viewer with pleasurable visual information about the 17th century and makes one feel quite giddy with the unaccustomed grandiosity of it all.

» ser algo habitualbecome + a common featurebe a fact of life .

Example: Droughts are becoming a common feature, parching the land at least once every two years.

Example: Federal aid to help cope with the problem of information was not new and had been a fact of life in one way or another for a long time.

» ser habitualbe customary .

Example: She deliberately refused to rise to her feet when he entered a room as was customary, often pretending not to have seen him.

» ser la tónica habitualbe the usual thing .

Example: Taking your date out for dinner or a movie is the usual thing to do these days.

Habitual synonyms

chronic in spanish: crónico, pronunciation: krɑnɪk part of speech: adjective inveterate in spanish: empedernido, pronunciation: ɪnvetɜrət part of speech: adjective established in spanish: establecido, pronunciation: ɪstæblɪʃt part of speech: adjective usual in spanish: usual, pronunciation: juʒəwəl part of speech: adjective accustomed in spanish: acostumbrado, pronunciation: əkʌstəmd part of speech: adjective customary in spanish: acostumbrado, pronunciation: kʌstəmeri part of speech: adjective addicted in spanish: fanático, pronunciation: ədɪktəd part of speech: adjective confirmed in spanish: confirmado, pronunciation: kənfɜrmd part of speech: adjective wonted in spanish: acostumbrado, pronunciation: wʌntɪd part of speech: adjective, verb
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