settled habit
1habit — ► NOUN 1) a settled or regular tendency or practice. 2) informal an addiction to drugs. 3) general shape or mode of growth, especially of a plant or mineral. 4) a long, loose garment worn by a member of a religious order. ► VERB archaic ▪ dress.… …
2habit — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from Latin habitus condition, character, from habēre to have, hold more at give Date: 13th century 1. archaic clothing 2. a. a costume characteristic of a calling, rank, or function < a nun s… …
3settled — [[t]se̱t(ə)ld[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED: usu ADJ n If you have a settled way of life, you stay in one place, in one job, or with one person, rather than moving around or changing. He decided to lead a more settled life with his partner... His house was… …
4habit — n. & v. n. 1 a settled or regular tendency or practice (often foll. by of + verbal noun: has a habit of ignoring me). 2 a practice that is hard to give up. 3 a mental constitution or attitude. 4 Psychol. an automatic reaction to a specific… …
5habit — 1. An act, behavioral response, practice, or custom established in one s repertoire by frequent repetition of the same act. SEE ALSO: addiction. 2. A basic variable in the study of conditioning and learning used to designate a new response… …
6settled — Synonyms and related words: SOL, acquitted, agreed, all bets off, all off, all over, all up, all up with, anchored, arranged, ascertained, assigned, assured, at an end, attested, authenticated, beat, beaten, bent, bested, borne out, canceled,… …
7habit — noun 1》 a settled or regular tendency or practice. 2》 general shape or mode of growth, especially of a plant or a mineral. 3》 a long, loose garment worn by a member of a religious order. ↘archaic clothing; attire. 4》 archaic a person s health …
8confirmed — adjective a) having a settled habit; inveterate or habitual a confirmed liar b) verified or ratified a confirmed treaty Ant …
9The Benedictine Order — The Benedictine Order † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Benedictine Order The Benedictine Order comprises monks living under the Rule of St. Benedict, and commonly known as black monks . The order will be considered in this article under… …
10Peirce, Charles Sanders — American pragmatism Peirce Cheryl Misak INTRODUCTION Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914), one of America’s greatest philosophers, mathematicians, and logicians, was a difficult and not altogether pleasant character. That, combined with what the… …