英:[hə'bɪtjʊeɪt]
美:[həˈbɪtʃuˌet]
英:[hə'bɪtjʊeɪt]
美:[həˈbɪtʃuˌet]
ha·bit·u·ate
h bI chu eIt
第三人称单数:habituates
现在分词:habituating
过去式:habituated
过去分词:habituated
habituation (n.)
词根:habit
adj.habitual 习惯的;惯常的;习以为常的
adv.habitually 习惯地;日常地
n.habit 习惯,习性;嗜好
habituation 习惯,熟习;[生理] 习惯化
habitude 习俗;习惯
habitus 习惯;体质;状态
vt.habit 使穿衣
verb
transitive verb
to make used to something : accustom
frequent sense 1
intransitive verb
to cause habituation
to undergo habituation
habituate to a stimulus
"使习惯,使熟悉",1520年代,来自晚期拉丁语 habituatus,是 habituare 的过去分词,意为"使身体处于一种状态或习惯",源自拉丁语 habitus,意为"状态,外貌,服装",最初是 habere 的过去分词,意为"拥有,持有,占有; 穿戴; 发现自己,处于; 考虑,思考,理由,心中有; 管理,保持",源自 PIE 词根 *ghabh-,意为"给予或接受"。相关词汇: Habituated; habituating。
The first known use of habituate was in the 15th century
hemoglobinnoun
a protein that contains iron, is the chief means of transporting oxygen in the body of vertebrate animals, occurs in the red blood cells, and is able to combine loosely with oxygen in regions (as the lungs) where it is in high concentration and release it in regions (as the tissues of the internal organs) where it is in low concentration
hematoxylinnoun
a compound found in the wood of a tropical American tree and used chiefly as a biological stain
hackberrynoun
any of a genus of trees and shrubs that are related to the elms and have small often edible berries
the wood of a hackberry
haciendanoun
a large estate in Spanish-speaking countries
hachurenoun
a short line used for shading or especially to show different levels or slopes on a map
habituateverb
to make used to something
habituateverb
to make used to something
habituateverb
to cause habituation in
1 Given the park's popularity, the animals here are habituated, and even elusive species such as leopards are super-comfortable around vehicles.
2 The media has a responsibility to fight back in kind, and at least try to habituate people to recognizing and confronting the truth.
3 But the ultimate title feels more right, and speaks to how we have normalized, habituated, and internalized the trauma of mass shootings.
4 If we start to habituate ourselves now, we will be prepared and our taste buds adept to alternative bananas in time for its demise.
5 Or we might simply habituate prey to large noisy animals—like us—and thus render them more susceptible to predators later.
或许我们只是习惯了发出嘈杂声响的大型动物,而这会让它们更容易受到捕食者的影响。
6 Am I habituated to just getting by financially?
7 Still, with a couple of hours to kill, they were determined, or maybe just habituated, to make and post one of their signature short videos.
8 You must habituate yourself to hard work.
你必须使自己习惯于艰苦的工作。
9 “It’s important to make sure that the orphans that are raised in captivity do not become imprinted upon or habituated to humans,” the post said.
10 Researchers started habituating the chimps to the presence of humans in 1987.
11 Wash said too much salt in childhood habituates youngsters to its taste, and raises blood pressure, leading to strokes and heart failure.
12 Of course by now the bear has become thoroughly habituated both to human beings and to their food.
13 Because we're habituated, both in life and in fiction, to certain ways of expressing things.
14 "The magpie is currently under the care of Desi. Unfortunately, it has been highly habituated to human contact and is not capable of being released back into the wild," a spokesperson said.
15 My first quarter at Lowood seemed an age; and not the golden age either; it comprised an irksome struggle with difficulties in habituating myself to new rules and unwonted tasks.
16 In a country without freedom or good health care, for example, people can habituate to what’s not good rather than struggling against it.
17 He wraps them in a deep-country quiet, the kind that can unnerve city people and sound — feel — utterly foreign, especially to ears habituated to the noise of American movies with their therapeutic chatter.
18 One can habituate oneself to living alone , though rarely with any pleasure.
虽然独自一人生活很少会有乐趣,但还是可以习惯的。
19 Teams of researchers spend 8-12 hours a day following four groups that are "habituated" to the presence of humans.
20 He looked forward to permanent undersea human settlements, and the rise of “homo aquaticus,” a new type of human habituated to life in the water.