Frequently experienced; known closely or intimately.
1Characters come, move about and make their final exits through long-familiar doors.
2So instead I replayed what I had, the long-familiar images and the recent arrivals.
3Perhaps it was their long-familiar, friendly faces which made this his favourite room, his own especial domain.
4Looking down through his window on all the long-familiar objects, he saw a light in Sabine's store-chamber.
5Visions of long-familiar homes and long-familiar friends?
6Regnault, however, had spoken with passion, and as though out of the fulness of some sore and long-familiar pondering.
7She spoke very listlessly, looking past him as if at a long-familiar picture which she was tired of contemplating.
8They were married in the sunshine of the old orchard, circled by the loving and kindly faces of long-familiar friends.
9The boy worried that his mother might not be safe, out there in the suddenly unknown streets of this long-familiar town.
10You can live a lifetime in one place and yet not master its geography: routes long-familiar will suddenly be blocked off by barriers of checkpoints.