Use "habitually" in a sentence

1. Their faces were habitually sour.

2. Tom is habitually late for school.

3. Customarily: In a customary manner; commonly; habitually

4. Habitually attending, or pressing; as a Besetting sin

5. The Amur leopard is habitually nocturnal and solitary.

6. (2010), Bipedal locomotion is defined as ‘walking habitually on two feet, walking habitually on two legs is the single most distinctive feature of hominins

7. His supervisor called him down for being habitually late.

8. They habitually gorged to the bursting point on Sunday.

9. Conventionally; frequently; generally; habitually; naturally; normally; regularly; routinely; traditionally; usually; wontedly

10. His mother had a patient who habitually flew into rages.

11. If it frightened him, he habitually reached out and grasped it.

12. There is something wrong with anyone who is so habitually rude.

13. Customarily (1 Occurrence) Noah Webster's Dictionary (adv.) In a customary manner; habitually

14. And all this yellow is ambient sound that we habitually tune out.

15. Play media Edward habitually smoked twenty cigarettes and twelve cigars a day.

16. The pain of the disease caused him habitually to furrow his brow.

17. 50 synonyms for Always: habitually, regularly, every time, inevitably, consistently, invariably, aye

18. The insomniac is habitually afflicted with wakefulness at times when he wishes to sleep.

19. Circulator: a person who habitually reveals personal or sensational facts about others

20. Bloviator meaning One who habitually Bloviates; a pompous, opinionated, typically voluble commentator.

21. They had the faces of little old ladies who habitually attack policemen.

22. For example, I am speaking now – I can speak either habitually or Consciously

23. Teens who lie Compulsively or pathologically will lie habitually, often for no reason at all

24. Synonyms for Customarily include commonly, generally, normally, traditionally, usually, habitually, ordinarily, regularly, conventionally and routinely

25. The condition of being habitually occupied with or involved in something: Addiction to romance novels.

26. There's no snake known that will habitually attack human beings unless threatened with its life.

27. Sahampati once saw that the Brahminee, mother of brahmadeva thera, habitually made offerings to brahmā

28. A glutton is defined as “one given habitually to greedy and voracious eating and drinking.”

29. In time, spraying on the same scent habitually can make us completely insensitive to it.

30. Their voices came down, afar and indistinctly, from the upper heights where they habitually dwelt.

31. Buyers who habitually purchase supplies from one supplier may recognise that change involves unwarranted risk.

32. Congregation, an assembly of persons, especially a body assembled for religious worship or habitually attending a particular church

33. Carper (plural Carpers) A person who habitually carps, who talks too much and regularly finds fault

34. Biter definition, a person or animal that bites, especially habitually or viciously: That dog is a Biter

35. But what struck me then was the idea of his habitually alternating with pipe and cigarette-smoking.

36. Many patients habitually use one or two sites and develop hard subcutaneous plaques or disfiguring insulin hypertrophy.

37. That is the sort of thing that children do: habitually mispronounce someone's name in order to irritate them.

38. Jeff had three days' growth of beard and he habitually wore a beret to cover his baldness.

39. The more general view was less charitable, placing more emphasis on the belief that Sri Lankans habitually lied in court.

40. “Discreet religious signs”, such as “accessories and garments habitually worn by pupils without religious significance” are, however, permitted

41. “Discreet religious signs”, such as “accessories and garments habitually worn by pupils without religious significance” are, however, permitted.

42. 29 Jeff had three days' growth of beard and he habitually wore a beret to cover his baldness.

43. Besetting (adj) habitually attacking, harassing, or pressing upon or about; as, a Besetting sin How to pronounce Besetting?

44. Cyclist (plural Cyclists) A person who rides a cycle, especially a bicycle, or who habitually engages in cycling

45. Reality is a projection of your thoughts or the things you habitually think about. Stephen Richards 

46. Yellow-Bibbled Lory bibs are habitually very active you’d quite easily be able to notice if something was wrong

47. All Blighter men were warriors and habitually wore armor as casually as the Imperials wore silks, wools, and linens

48. Absentmindedness is where a person or person’s behavior or manner has or shows a habitually forgetful or inattentive disposition

49. Presidential losers have also habitually opted for mates designed to unify the ticket but with whom they could comfortably identify.

50. · Having no fixed abode or sleeping habitually in the streets or other places not intended for living or sleeping

51. He habitually risked not only his financial security but also his credibility as a writer with any consistent principles.

52. Estate agents' advertisements habitually claim that country houses are suitable for every use from country clubs to prestige headquarters.

53. To occupy (oneself) with or involve (oneself) in something habitually: That show was so good that I became Addicted to watching it.

54. The Antbirds are a large family of insect-eating passerine birds, Thamnophilidae, known for habitually following columns of marching ants

55. But the shy and introspective Allen habitually returned to his bachelor pad - after dropping in to kiss the children goodnight.

56. And it only needed the habitually mournful expression of one of the dogs to deepen a little and I was round there posthaste.

57. The Regulations apply only where computer screens are habitually used by one or more employees as a significant part of daily work.

58. We pray without Ceasing when we habitually meet whatever comes to us with faith and with love, with a mind to

59. The new study, with accompanying video, is the first to show one species of sharks habitually “Bumming” food off another shark species

60. He Conceives of a moral virtue as a character trait that it is good to possess and that a person displays habitually

61. Antbird, (family Thamnophilidae), any of numerous insect-eating birds of the American tropics (order Passeriformes) known for habitually following columns of marching ants

62. According to one dictionary, “procrastinate” means “to put off intentionally and habitually; to put off intentionally the doing of something that should be done.”

63. The definition of a Congregation is a gathering of people, or people who share the same faith and habitually attend the same church

64. But, for the person who makes a routine of habitually Belittling others, in the end, you will find a person with few true friends

65. Blue Chalcedony is excellent for those who tend to worry, as it helps one to center in the present instea of habitually projectiong into an imaginary future.

66. It does not matter if I just sit and gossip, still ten thousand people want to listen because every word is uttered Consciously, not habitually

67. Habitually, I did not entertain or even pay much attention to any man lest he came to me Bloodripe and toppling into my warm lap

68. Thus, some translations clear up this seeming Contradiction by accurately using phrases such as “does not practice sin” or “does not habitually sin.”� — New World Translation; Phillips

69. The case of divorce between H/M/T citizens or foreign nationals that register their marriage and habitually reside in Chinese mainland, shall be under the jurisdiction of chinese court.

70. 1. Busy, diligent, industrious imply active or earnest effort to accomplish something, or a habitual attitude of such earnestness. Busy means actively employed, temporarily or habitually: a Busy official.

71. While we to Jove the pure libations pay, / Than Jove what Apter claims the hallow'd lay? ( of persons or things ) Having a habitual tendency ; habitually liable or likely ; disposed towards

72. The word is defined by Webster's dictionary as "of or relating to those who habitually eat together." Applied to "Commensal" rats and mice, this term means the

73. Furthermore, because of the capping rule, the margin of uncertainty has no actual effect on the VAT own resources paid by Member States whose base habitually exceeds 55 % of GNP (Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg and Portugal).

74. To the surprise of his men and officers, whom Jackson habitually left in the dark as to his intentions, on May 4 they boarded trains that were heading west, not east toward Richmond, as they had anticipated.

75. Here are all the possible meanings and translations of the word Alky. Princeton's WordNet (0.00 / 0 votes)Rate this definition: alcoholic, Alky, dipsomaniac, boozer, lush, soaker, souse (noun) a person who drinks alcohol to excess habitually

76. Cyberstalking occurs when an individual uses an electronic tool – such as a website, email, phone, or social media account – to harass, control, manipulate, or habitually disparage a child, adult, business, or group without a direct or implied threat of physical harm.

77. This new designation of Burma for TPS enables Burmese nationals (and individuals without nationality who last habitually resided in Burma) currently residing in the United States to file initial applications for TPS, so long as they meet eligibility

78. For example, if you habitually think, "I'm not talented enough to progress in my career," turn this around and write a positive Affirmation such as, "I am a skilled and experienced professional." Write your Affirmation in the present tense.

79. Instead of balancing the power of the active Chicaners in the other assembly, these curates must necessarily become the active coadjutors, or at best the passive instruments, of those by whom they had been habitually guided in their petty village concerns

80. Moreover the hold down had an incisive argue eventuating the market bunch users Assentatious towards the way of thinking that the vicechancellor committees apropos of the sites decidedly are habitually express embarrassed, not rather habitual relocate afoot the recondition instruction.