habitus

noun
/ˈhæ.bɪ.təs/

Etymology

From Latin habitus (“habit”), from habeō (“have; maintain”). The plural habiti is a misconstruction, as the Latin plural is in fact habitūs. habiti may have been influenced by Latin habitī, the plural of the participle habitus; however, it is not the etymon of the English term.

  1. derived from habitus

Definitions

  1. Habitude

    Habitude; mode of life; bearing.

  2. General appearance.

    • [M]any species having eschariform zoaria in quiet water are able to assume the membraniporiform habitus in strongly agitated water.
  3. habit

  4. + 3 more definitions
    1. the general shape and appearance of the body, usually with reference to weight, adipose…

      the general shape and appearance of the body, usually with reference to weight, adipose distribution, posture, and gait; most often called by the collocation body habitus.

    2. The lifestyle, values, dispositions and expectations of particular social groups that are…

      The lifestyle, values, dispositions and expectations of particular social groups that are acquired through the activities and experiences of everyday life.

      • A wrestler could gain the rank of ōzeki based on his competitive achievements, but the promotion to yokozuna implied the presence of a certain habitus than embodied the quintessential traditional Japaneseness.
    3. The liturgical clothing of monks, nuns and the clerical community, metaphorically…

      The liturgical clothing of monks, nuns and the clerical community, metaphorically referring to the religious mode of life.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for habitus. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA