To take or consume (regularly or habitually).
Make psychologically or physically used (to something)
1 Neither did waiting seem to habituate her vision to the lack of light.
2 Train them to virtue, habituate them to industry, activity, and spirit.
3 I can agree that practicing falling can habituate you to an otherwise frightening experience.
4 Human nature can habituate itself even to pain, and it was so with him.
5 Better, rather, habituate ourselves to think of it as unalterable.
6 Eventually this unquestioning acceptance of bizarre behaviors may habituate them to the idea of violence.
7 Furthermore, patients with schizophrenia habituate less than healthy subjects.
8 Again, at a reperusal, he informed her: "I must habituate myself."
9 This may allow animals to more specifically or flexibly habituate based on stimulus context or internal states.
10 My object is to habituate your mind-
11 Tyrants know that to habituate nations to oppression, the moral feeling of the people has to be killed.
12 Never had I so much need of the fortitude to which I have endeavoured to habituate my mind.
13 Still others habituate themselves to some manner of tone-production, and neither increase nor diminish the degree of stiffness.
14 To habituate your hands, run up an easier climb or part of your project, letting the cold sink in.
15 It is a barren superfluity, to which those who can hardly procure what nature requires, cannot prudently habituate themselves.
16 Human beings habituate fast.
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Об этом термине habituate
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Translations for habituate