All habituate synonyms
ha·bit·u·ate
H h verb habituate
- discipline — training to act in accordance with rules; drill: military discipline.
- school — a large number of fish, porpoises, whales, or the like, feeding or migrating together.
- adjust — When you adjust to a new situation, you get used to it by changing your behaviour or your ideas.
- inure — to accustom to hardship, difficulty, pain, etc.; toughen or harden; habituate (usually followed by to): inured to cold.
- confirm — If something confirms what you believe, suspect, or fear, it shows that it is definitely true.
- season — one of the four periods of the year (spring, summer, autumn, and winter), beginning astronomically at an equinox or solstice, but geographically at different dates in different climates.
- devote — If you devote yourself, your time, or your energy to something, you spend all or most of your time or energy on it.
- acclimate — When you acclimate or are acclimated to a new situation, place, or climate, you become used to it.
- acclimatize — When you acclimatize or are acclimatized to a new situation, place, or climate, you become used to it.
- harden — to make hard or harder: to harden steel.
- train — Railroads. a self-propelled, connected group of rolling stock.
- addict — An addict is someone who takes harmful drugs and cannot stop taking them.
- tolerate — to allow the existence, presence, practice, or act of without prohibition or hindrance; permit.
- familiarize — to make (onself or another) well-acquainted or conversant with something.
- condition — If you talk about the condition of a person or thing, you are talking about the state that they are in, especially how good or bad their physical state is.
- familiarise — to make (onself or another) well-acquainted or conversant with something.
- accustom — If you accustom yourself or another person to something, you make yourself or them become used to it.
- acclimatise — Standard spelling of from=Non-Oxford British spelling.
- orientate — (UK, intransitive) To face (a given direction).
- prepare — to put in proper condition or readiness: to prepare a patient for surgery.
- endure — Suffer (something painful or difficult) patiently.
- break in — If someone, usually a thief, breaks in, they get into a building by force.
- take to — to get into one's hold or possession by voluntary action: to take a cigarette out of a box; to take a pen and begin to write.