22 collocations for habiting

Thus by nature and by habit the negro is utterly unqualified to take care of himself.

Ne vous amusez pas à vous quarer comme vn Paon, & regarder superbement autour de vous, si vous estes bien mis, & bien chaussé, si vos hauts-dechausses & vos autres habits vous sont bienfaits.

That habit clung to me, and mocks me now.

And he learnt all these things submissively, being by nature and habit a teachable creature and only by food and accident gigantic.

Un fanfaron croyant qu'il était au-dessous de lui de se déranger, se laissa accrocher, et son habit fut déchiré.

One child habiting earth dared to lift eyes into the awful arch of air, wherein are laid the foundation-stones of the crystalline wall, and, beholding drops of Infinite Love, garnered one, and, walking forth with it in her heart, went into the church-yard,a regret arising that the graves that held the columns fallen from the family-corridor had found so little of place within affection's realm.

While not by habit an eavesdropper he felt no shame in fortuitously overhearing anything Lanpher or the stranger might be moved to say.

With respect to habit formation, then, you see that youth is the time when emphasis should be laid upon the formation of as many useful habits as possible.

At the foot of a cañon 4000 feet above the sea you may find magnificent specimens of this oak fifty feet high, with craggy, bulging trunks, five to seven feet in diameter, and at the head of the cañon, 2500 feet higher, a dense, soft, low, shrubby growth of the same species, while all the way up the cañon between these extremes of size and habit a perfect gradation may be traced.

Each civilization matures into forms and develops functions and institutions that tend to consolidate and crystallize in well defined social patterns and habit grooves in which two forces oppose each other: one force is statuspreserving that which is; the other force is changethat which tends to become or is becoming.

Tear yourself from these expressions; oppose to one habit the contrary habit; to sophistry oppose reason, and the exercise and discipline of reason; against persuasive (deceitful) appearances we ought to have manifest præcognitions ([Greek: prolaepseis]), cleared of all impurities and ready to hand.

Rudolph sprang up and raced again, following by habit the path which he and she had traversed at noon.

In Prussia the Minister-President had not acquired by habit these privileges, and the power of the different Ministers was much more equal.

(De Grignon tire la lettre de son habit et va pour la lui remettre.)

Que vos habits ne demeurent point sales, déchirez, couuerts de poussiere, ou pelez.

In this respect, at least, a totally different kind of government was looked for on the part of his son and successor, who was by nature and habit a mere soldier.

Soon habit steps in and stamps the process on mind and body and before the author is conscious of it, a serious appetite or a degrading vice is fastened upon him from which neither time nor effort, prayers nor tears, may ever shake him free.

Colour brownish white; habit stiff, branches short.

Le grand comte m'accueillit d'abord avec beaucoup de distinction, parce qu'à mon habit il me prit pour Turc; mais quand il sut que j'étois chrétien il se refroidit un peu.

(De Grignon tire la lettre de son habit et va pour la lui remettre.)

Was it likely that I, who am by temperament and habit accustomed to read human visages like a book, was it likely, I say, that I would fail to see craftiness in those pale, shifty eyes, deceit in the weak, slobbering mouth, intemperance in the whole aspect of the shrunken, slouchy figure which I had, for my subsequent sorrow, so generously rescued from starvation?

Leonard Monckton was by nature a schemer and by habit a villain, and he was sure to put this discovery to profit.

22 collocations for  habiting