habituative

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

habituate +‎ -ive

Adjective[edit]

habituative (comparative more habituative, superlative most habituative)

  1. Related to habitual behavior.
    • 1981, {unattributed}, Physiological Psychology - Volume 9 - Page 19
      "It is hypothesized that amobarbitol raises the threshold this particular frequency by suppressing the processing capabilities of the habituative system in the rat."

Noun[edit]

habituative (plural habituatives)

  1. (grammar) verb form expressing habitual action or condition
    • 1988, Alan R. Thomas, Methods in Dialectology: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference ...[1]:
      "The habituative and progressive do not co-occur with the perfective. You may choose either the habituative or the progressive or both, but if the progressive is chosen the predicator following must be a verb and not a verbal adjective."