| 释义 | 
		hab·i·ta·tion \ˌhabəˈtāshən\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English habitacioun, from Middle French habitation, from Latin habitation-, habitatio, from habitatus (past participle of habitare to inhabit, dwell) + -ion-, -io -io — more at habit 1.   a.  : the act of inhabiting : state of inhabiting or dwelling or of being inhabited : occupancy  b.  : the right of one with his family to occupy the residential property of another as a home 2.  : a dwelling place : house, home, residence  < a map showing towns, villages, and scattered habitations >  < his notebooks … gave his ideas a local habitation — Van Wyck Brooks > 3.  : settlement, colony  < their habitations were usually spoken of as camps, sometimes composed of 200 tents — Clark Wissler > • hab·i·ta·tion·al \| ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷|tāshənə1, -shnəl\ adjective |