inveterate
suomi-englanti sanakirjainveterate englannista suomeksi
piintynyt
Verbi
inveterate englanniksi
(senseid) Firmly established from having been around for a long time; of long standing.
(syn)
(hyper)
(ant)
(nearsyn)
(ux)
(RQ:Carlyle Past and Present)
{{quote-text|en|year=1911|author=Morrison I. Swift|chapter=Humanizing the Prisons,|title=The Atlantic
(senseid) Having had a habit (usually a bad habit) for a long time.
(cot)
(collocation)
(collocation)
(RQ:Landon Ethel Churchill)
(RQ:Alcott Little Women)
(quote-book)|location=New York|publisher=Picador|isbn=9781250118035|page=6|passage=Like many lonely people, he was an inveterate hoarder, making and surrounding himself with objects, barriers against the demands of human intimacy.
{{quote-text|en|year=1748|author=David Hume|title=Enquiries concerning the human understanding and concerning the principles of morals|location=London|publisher=Oxford University Press|year_published=1973|section=§ 15
1765–70, (w), ''(w)''
- This his lordship perused with a countenance, and scrutiny, apparently inveterate.
{{quote-text|en|year=1622|author=Francis Bacon|title=The History of the Raigne of King Henry the Seventh
1640, Edward Dacres, translation of ''The Prince'' by Machiavelli|Niccolò Machiavelli, Chapter XIX http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/15772:
- "none of these Princes do use to maintaine any armies together, which are annex'd and inveterated with the governments of the provinces, as were the armies of the Roman Empire. "
1851 January, author unknown, "The Philosophy of the American Union, in ''The United States Magazine and Democratic Review'', page 16:
- "The foregoing elements of disunion are inveterated by the constituent formation of our national legislature. In the French chambers the members are all Frenchmen ; but our members of Congress are effectively Georgians, New-Yorkers, Carolinians, Pennsylvanians, &c."
(feminine plural of)
(inflection of)