habitué
Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++ha·bit·u·é /həˈbɪtʃueɪ/ noun [countable + of] formalALWAYS/EVERY TIME someone who regularly goes to a particular place or event 常客 SYN regularExamples from the Corpus
habitué• Outrageously camp and very witty, Paul was an habitué of the Colony Room where he and Minton may have first met.Origin habitué (1800-1900) French Late Latin habituare “to habituate”, from Latin habitus; → HABITha·bit·u·é nounChineseSyllable
who place Corpus particular regularly to someone a goes
habitué
ha‧bit‧u‧é /həˈbɪtʃueɪ/
noun [countable + of]
SYN regular
ha‧bit‧u‧é /həˈbɪtʃueɪ/
noun [countable + of] Date: 1800-1900
Language: French
Origin: Late Latin habituare 'to habituate', from Latin habitus; ⇨ habit
formal someone who regularly goes to a particular place or event Language: French
Origin: Late Latin habituare 'to habituate', from Latin habitus; ⇨ habit
SYN regular