释义 |
inhabitation
in·hab·it I0141200 (ĭn-hăb′ĭt)v. in·hab·it·ed, in·hab·it·ing, in·hab·its v.tr.1. To live or reside in: Dinosaurs inhabited the earth millions of years ago.2. To be present in; fill: Old childhood memories inhabit the attic.v.intr. Archaic To dwell. [Middle English enhabiten, from Old French enhabiter, from Latin inhabitāre : in-, in; see in-2 + habitāre, to dwell, frequentative of habēre, to have; see ghabh- in Indo-European roots.] in·hab′it·a·bil′i·ty n.in·hab′it·a·ble adj.in·hab′i·ta′tion n.in·hab′it·er n.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | inhabitation - the act of dwelling in or living permanently in a place (said of both animals and men); "he studied the creation and inhabitation and demise of the colony"inhabitancy, habitationoccupancy, tenancy - an act of being a tenant or occupantcohabitation - the act of living together and having a sexual relationship (especially without being married)bivouacking, camping, tenting, encampment - the act of encamping and living in tents in a camp |
inhabitation Related to inhabitation: remonstrationSynonyms for inhabitationnoun the act of dwelling in or living permanently in a place (said of both animals and men)SynonymsRelated Words- occupancy
- tenancy
- cohabitation
- bivouacking
- camping
- tenting
- encampment
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