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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "habituate" in a sentence

    habituate example sentences

    habituate


    habituated


    habituates


    habituating


    1. This is because the pleasure from all sensual pleasure is temporary and worse still, we habituate to it over time, which means that any sensual experience which is continued for too long, or to excess, will lose its attraction and become an irritation or boring


    2. Well, won’t the Musalmans unwittingly ensure that the tenets of Islam are injected into their toddlers in adult dosage to habituate them to adhere to the supposedly straight path that the Quran laid for them that Muhammad had cemented for the umma to tread on into the eternity?


    3. Like everything else, we must habituate the senses to a fresh impression, gentle or violent, sad or joyous


    4. "And you really believe the result would be still more sure with us than in the East, and in the midst of our fogs and rains a man would habituate himself more easily than in a warm latitude to this progressive absorption of poison?"


    5. "Yes, I understand that; and how would you habituate yourself, for instance, or rather, how


    6. did you habituate yourself to it?"


    7. 48 h of forced exposure to 1% sucrose solution to habituate them to the sucrose


    8. to a cage and allowed to habituate for 5 min


    1. Harry headed home after the most rewarding turn of events of the day, and that evening instead of the meager portions to which he was habituated, he treated himself to supper out


    2. Most, however, are more habituated to


    3. The soldiers are every day exercised in the use of their arms, and, being constantly under the command of their officers, are habituated to the same prompt obedience which takes place in standing armies


    4. Every mind state, thought, or emotion that we experience repeatedly becomes stronger and more habituated


    5. HABITUATED DRINK, AS BODY HAS GOT USED TO THIS


    6. the boarding schools, “so soon as the children would have acquired strength, they would have been habituated to military works [It is necessary] to preclude the introduction of young people into social life until inured to discipline, and to the privations of the camp, inflamed with love of country, and burning to serve it


    7. stupid to build himself a coarse and gross astral vehicle, habituated to


    8. upon them and become most habituated to them


    9. let out or act out their emotions this way may become habituated to the cycle of excitement and


    10. their pride, elderly, lack of prey, are habituated to human'

    11. some time for them to be habituated to her presence, patience,


    12. chimpanzees were evasive, not habituated to humans


    13. something is wrong but in many cases become habituated or


    14. By then, however, we’re habituated to it


    15. to be cured, habituated to a life without the dysfunctional coping


    16. So, they get habituated at seeing things from the pan-Islamic prism, which stymies their Indian vision besides sullying their national image, and sadly for them, there would be incessant alerts of ‘Islam in danger’ from around the world, which keep their psyche forever stressed by their kafir enigma


    17. More recently we have been habituated in how to conduct an automated search for this type of knowledge: google it


    18. A father flesh-vesting his heir or a mother giving suck to accidental child can be an instinct habituated from duty or guilt as much as from love or fealty


    19. What is being learned is not simply the skill, but also the desire for not only rewards, but specifically being habituated to need a specific type of reward to be motivated to acquire skills, i


    20. “Which is?” HipHope snidely offered the setup line she had been habituated to assume from CrimeWave Videos

    21. He knew the owner was habituated to seeing any request or proposal


    22. money to buy one, be habituated to the stink…stop complaining


    23. By staring at the flames of the fire each night, they became habituated to staring at only one thing for a long time: consequently, they became better tool-users


    24. The more humans used fire, the more they became habituated to looking at only one thing: the fire


    25. The camera, and more particularly the instantaneous camera, has habituated people to expect in a portrait a momentary expression, and of these momentary expressions the faint smile, as we all know, is an easy first in the matter of popularity


    26. At present the governors, induced by the motives which I have named, treat their subjects badly; while they and their adherents, especially the young men of the governing class, are habituated to lead a life of luxury and idleness both of body and mind; they do nothing, and are incapable of resisting either pleasure or pain


    27. After having stood a few minutes in the cavern, the atmosphere of which was rather warm than damp, Dantes' eye, habituated as it was to darkness, could pierce even to the remotest angles of the cavern, which was of granite that sparkled like diamonds


    28. "But I am really glad to have seen such a sight; and I understand what the count said—that when you have once habituated yourself to a similar spectacle, it is the only one that causes you any emotion


    29. Haidee dried her eyes, and continued: "By this time our eyes, habituated to the darkness, had recognized the messenger of the pasha,—it was a friend


    30. I’ll be hanging my food in the more touristy parts of the trail, where the bears have become habituated, but until then I wouldn’t worry about it

    31. activity, and for so long a period not merely estranged, but outlawed, from society, had habituated herself to such latitude of speculation as was altogether foreign to the clergyman


    32. But ye do me no more than a judicature, in supposing that, in this matter, I am habituated wi’ the best intentions


    33. This concert of praise, never before bestowed upon Eugenie, made her blush under its novelty; but insensibly her ear became habituated to the sound, and however coarse the compliments might be, she soon was so accustomed to hear her beauty lauded that if any new-comer had seemed to think her plain, she would have felt the reproach far more than she might have done eight years earlier


    34. Habituated as she was to dissimulation through endeavoring to copy her husband in all his actions, these emotions were more than she could endure


    35. Gavroche, habituated to facing the unexpected in all quarters, had everything about him


    36. And then, Cosette had, for long years, been habituated to seeing enigmas around her; every being who has had a mysterious childhood is always prepared for certain renunciations


    37. He, on his side, habituated as he was to have women consider him handsome, retained no more recollection of Cosette than of any other woman


    38. We must have become habituated to fatality and to encounters with it, in order to have the daring to raise our eyes


    39. was habituated to indulge in: somehow it pleased her


    40. But whether or not this adaptation is in most cases very close, we have evidence with some few plants, of their becoming, to a certain extent, naturally habituated to different temperatures; that is, they become acclimatised: thus the pines and rhododendrons, raised from seed collected by Dr

    41. But, as we have seen, organic beings long habituated to certain uniform conditions under a state of nature, when subjected, as under confinement, to a considerable change in their conditions, very frequently are rendered more or less sterile; and we know that a cross between two forms that have become widely or specifically different, produce hybrids which are almost always in some degree sterile


    42. As if long habituated to such profane talk from his old shipmate, Bildad, without noticing his present irreverence, quietly looked up, and seeing me, glanced again inquiringly towards Peleg


    43. We had become habituated to this thought, and at the end of a year there was no longer the mutual embarrassment when our eyes chanced to meet


    44. We are so habituated to this idea that we are alarmed at the sacrifices exacted by the doctrine of Jesus, which teaches that man's happiness does not depend upon fortune and power, and that the rich cannot enter into the kingdom of God


    1. habituates, there exists the silent thought that the relationship is


    2. The perpetual stress of constant scrutiny habituates our lives into the proscribed crouch molded by inspection


    3. dead “soul” habituates himself to not see, hear, and understand all that what could


    4. The spirit of desire and the season of expectation preminds our children to lust, habituates them with rewards, until they reflexively feel and believe their fetish should win


    5. And is not a man reproached for flattery and meanness who subordinates the spirited animal to the unruly monster, and, for the sake of money, of which he can never have enough, habituates him in the days of his youth to be trampled in the mire, and from being a lion to become a monkey?


    1. Thus to constantly trigger society with Look at Me, Buy Me, Save Me trains them to be averse to the cry for help, desensitizes their ability to care, thus habituating them towards being unempathetic, which is what prompts mutual assistance


    2. What will your god, with all this history, teaching, and habituating, do to us, as we have done to ourselves, as our pets have done to us, and as Eartheart is doing


    3. We put our kids in uniforms and discipline their play, habituating them to follow rules and hierarchal orders of judgement, beyond their involvement or comprehension


    4. My first quarter at Lowood seemed an age; and not the golden age either; it comprised an irksome struggle with difficulties in habituating myself to new rules and unwonted tasks


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    Synonyms for "habituate"

    accustom habituate use familiarise familiarize inure wont

    "habituate" definitions

    take or consume (regularly or habitually)


    make psychologically or physically used (to something)