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inveterate
/ ɪnˈvɛtərɪt /
adjective
long established, esp so as to be deep-rooted or ingrained
an inveterate feeling of hostility
(prenominal) settled or confirmed in a habit or practice, esp a bad one; hardened
an inveterate smoker
obsolete, full of hatred; hostile
Other Word Forms
- inveterately adverb
- inveteracy noun
- inveterateness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of inveterate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of inveterate1
Example Sentences
When we meet him in Season 1, Gi-hun is down and out, an inveterate gambler.
The president is having a mental breakdown in “Symphony of Rats,” a 1988 fever dream by the inveterate theatrical bad boy Richard Foreman.
Trump is an inveterate liar about his fortune.
An inveterate fern fanatic, Steffen highly recommends their form and soft texture for the romantic garden.
An inveterate fabulist who remains terrified of his father, Casimir seems to have invented the wife and three children whom the family has never met.
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