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inhabit
[ in-hab-it ]
verb (used with object)
- to live or dwell in (a place), as people or animals:
Small animals inhabited the woods.
- to exist or be situated within; dwell in:
Weird notions inhabit his mind.
verb (used without object)
- Archaic. to live or dwell, as in a place.
inhabit
/ ɪnˈhæbɪt /
verb
- tr to live or dwell in; occupy
- archaic.intr to abide or dwell
Derived Forms
- inˌhabiˈtation, noun
- inˌhabitaˈbility, noun
- inˈhabitable, adjective
Other Words From
- in·hab·it·a·ble adjective
- in·hab·i·ta·tion noun
- pre·in·hab·it verb (used with object)
- pre·in·hab·i·ta·tion noun
- re·in·hab·it verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of inhabit1
Example Sentences
A UK-based monitoring group put the death toll at 41 and reported that the strikes hit a warehouse used to store weapons and homes inhabited by families of Iran-backed militia fighters.
The messages were straightforward and concise, although many elected officials who inhabit Sacramento’s political cocoon tend to be tone-deaf to voices that don’t emanate from large campaign donors and special interests.
The rapper displayed confident looseness on Saturday that only a veteran can truly inhabit on a stage in front of thousands of festivalgoers.
Mountain lions prefer to avoid people, but in a metro area of more than 18 million people, natural areas inhabited by mountain lions and other wildlife are also heavily used by recreationists.
Sierra Club founder John Muir rhapsodized about the purity of wilderness, supporting the push to protect Yosemite’s lands from the “dirty” influence of the native tribes who inhabited it.
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