English edit

Etymology edit

habituate +‎ -ive

Adjective edit

habituative (comparative more habituative, superlative most habituative)

  1. Related to habitual behavior.
    • 1981, {unattributed}, Physiological Psychology - Volume 9 - Page 19
      "It is hypothesized that amobarbitol raises the threshold this particular frequency by suppressing the processing capabilities of the habituative system in the rat."

Noun edit

habituative (plural habituatives)

  1. (grammar) verb form expressing habitual action or condition
    • 1988, Alan R. Thomas, Methods in Dialectology: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference ...[1]:
      "The habituative and progressive do not co-occur with the perfective. You may choose either the habituative or the progressive or both, but if the progressive is chosen the predicator following must be a verb and not a verbal adjective."