[ UK /hɐbˈɪt‍ʃuːə‍l/ ]
[ US /həˈbɪtʃuəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. commonly used or practiced; usual
    took his customary morning walk
    his accustomed thoroughness
    his habitual comment
    with her wonted candor
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How To Use habitual In A Sentence

  • When left to my own devices for a couple of weeks, I begin to habitually bake and craft and, well, housekeep.
  • The face muscles set differently when we think we are observed; it becomes habitual. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fifty consecutive, nonobese, habitually snoring, otherwise-healthy children (age range: 6-9 years) and 50 age -, gender -, and ethnicity-matched obese children (BMI z score: 1.67) underwent an overnight polysomnographic evaluation, followed by a multiple sleep latency test the following day. Dr. Sharma’s Obesity Notes » Blog Archive » Is Sleep Apnea a Significant Problem in Sleepy Kids?
  • People who knew Weisberg as a child recall a disheveled and awkward boy who habitually chewed on his shirt collar. One Smart Bookie
  • The letter is believed to be the first which appeared signed "ATTICUS," and was written many months before the author became known as Junius, and before any necessity had arisen for the exercise of that habitual caution which he afterwards evinced in the mention of any circumstance at all likely to lead to his detection. Notes and Queries, Number 18, March 2, 1850
  • The patients, all of whom were habitual heroin users, were aware of an abnormal local reaction from the time of the suspect injection.
  • The war is between my habitual and conscious thoughts about how to live and a new perspective struggling to be born.
  • In his habitual laconical way he counselled me to reserve all my savings for our journey, and to settle with my creditors when my Parisian successes had provided the necessary means. My Life — Volume 1
  • Smiling, frowning, squinting and other habitual facial expressions cause these wrinkles to become more prominent.
  • If not countermanded by personal courage or other organizational forces, this tendency becomes habitual and self-perpetuating.
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