habitable
Definition of habitable:
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part of speech: adverb
HABITABLY.
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Common misspellings:
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- habital (100.0%)
Usage examples for habitable:
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Hardly knowing whither he went, Pembroke did not arrive at the ruined aisle which leads to the habitable part of the Abbey until near three o'clock.
"Thaddeus of Warsaw" – Jane Porter -
He was doing a lively business in the horse and cattle trade again, had quit gambling, said rumor, and Mrs. Rallston was with him now on all his journeyings, and looking marvellously well and happy; and along in April Blake and Ray were doing all they knew how, with Mrs. Stannard's assistance, to make their quarters habitable for lady's use, and Rallston and Nell came and paid them a visit of an entire week, and went away enraptured with the regiment.
"Marion's Faith." – Charles King -
The whole place looks habitable and the eye finds an abundance of objects on which it can rest with pleasure."
"The Complete Historical Romances of Georg Ebers" – Georg Ebers -
Besides a house in the city, they had a sufficiently habitable one in a large garden in a village in the Poona district.
"India and the Indians" – Edward F. Elwin