habits
71eating habits — usual manners of eating …
72old habits die hard — spoken used for saying that it is difficult to change a way of behaving that someone has had for many years …
73buying habits — / baɪɪŋ ˌhæbɪts/ plural noun the general way in which some people select and buy goods …
74driving habits — The personal behaviour of the driver when controlling the vehicle, including the speeds he travels, how and when he shifts gears, how he uses the brakes, when and if he uses his signal lights, how he changes lanes, how he turns corners, etc …
75intemperate habits — See intemperance; habitual intemperance …
76Land of Steady Habits — …
77Habit (psychology) — Habits are habituated routines of behavior that are repeated regularly, tend to occur subconsciously, and tend to occur without directly thinking consciously about those behaviors. [Butler, Gillian; Hope, Tony. Managing Your Mind: The mental… …
78habit and repute — Habits and reputation …
79habit — [ abi ] n. m. • XIIe; lat. habitus « manière d être », « costume » 1 ♦ Sing. Vieilli Pièce d habillement. ⇒ costume, vêtement. L étoffe d un habit. Habit de velours. 2 ♦ Plur. LES HABITS : l ensemble des pièces composant l habillement. ⇒ affaires …
80Habit — • Habit is an effect of repeated acts and an aptitude to reproduce them, and may be defined as a quality difficult to change, whereby an agent whose nature it is to work one way or another indeterminately, is disposed easily and readily at will… …