Ainda não temos significados para "inveterate habit".
1Secret diplomacy may be the inveterate habit of Europe, especially of Italy.
2The motive was powerful, sufficiently powerful to conquer the force of inveterate habit.
3How is it, then, with you- inveterate habit or the strain of the ages?
4That it has grown into an inveterate habit.
5The most disagreeable thing about Gabriella, Jane had once said, was her inveterate habit of being reasonable.
6It was an inveterate habit of the Captain to spend much of his time at a café.
7Countless ages, such as the evolutionists require, have made her adopt forcible usurpation as an inveterate habit.
8But Oh, the inveterate habit of unbelief!
9This man, who took no thought of other persons, never forgot the inveterate habit of using those boxes.
10He had an inveterate habit of telling his most intimate and inner experiences in some sort of fantastic disguise.
11His inveterate habit of idle lounging and his taste for pleasure had made him incapable of any serious effort.
12Who wishes to have the inveterate habit of cracking the joints of his fingers or of biting his finger-nails?
13Poor Abel, as he was called, had an inveterate habit of over-sleeping himself and coming late to his work.
14The lessons, where he had a long inveterate habit of shuffling, came under Norman's eye at the same time.
15Tete Rouge, however, was sometimes rather troublesome; he had an inveterate habit of pilfering provisions at all times of the day.
16A want of the habit of observing conditions and an inveterate habit of taking averages are each of them often equally misleading.
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Inveterate habit nas variantes da língua