inhabitable
adj/ɪnˈhæbɪtəbəl/UK/ɪnˈhæbɪtəbəl/US
Etymology
From Middle English inhabitable, inhabytabill, from Middle French inhabitable and its etymon Latin inhabitābilis (“uninhabitable”). By surface analysis, in- + habitable.
- derived from inhabitābilis
- derived from inhabitable
- inherited from inhabitable
Definitions
Fit to live in
Fit to live in; habitable.
Not habitable
Not habitable; not suitable to be inhabited.
- […] Which to maintaine, I would allow him ods, / And meete him were I tied to runne afoote, / Euen to the frozen ridges of the Alpes, / Or any other ground inhabitable, / Where euer Engliſhman durſt ſet his foote, […]
The neighborhood
- antonymuninhabitable
- antonymunhabitable
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for inhabitable. 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