âdet, alışkanlık, itiyat

listen to the pronunciation of âdet, alışkanlık, itiyat
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
{i} wont
One’s habitual way of doing things, practise, custom

Such conditions, having been the common practice for years, and, existing in a less degree in some localities to the present time, afford a tangible reason for a form of correlation that is more universal than it is the wont of the profession to admit.

Accustomed or used (to or with a thing)

He could read English Manuscripts very elegantly, elegantissime: he was wont to preach to the people in the English tongue, though according to the dialect of Norfolk, where he had been brought up.

Accustomed, apt (to doing something)

Like a 60-yard Percy Harvin touchdown run or a Joe Haden interception return, Urban Meyer’s jaw-dropping resignation Saturday was, as he’s wont to say, “a game-changer.” — Sunday December 27, 2009, Stewart Mandel, INSIDE COLLEGE FOOTBALL, Meyer’s shocking resignation rocks college coaching landscape.

{v} a contraction of will not
{v} to be accustomed
{n} custom, use, habit
Will not
customary practice or habit, as in: It was his wont to stay late at the office
To be accustomed or habituated; to be used
{s} accustomed to, customary to, tends to
an established custom; "it was their habit to dine at 7 every evening"
Accustomed, apt
A colloquial contraction of woll not
{i} custom, habit; usual practice
habit: a pattern of behavior acquired through frequent repetition; "she had a habit twirling the ends of her hair"; "long use had hardened him to it"
Custom; habit; use; usage
Ones habitual way of doing things
{f} be used to, accustomed to; become used to; become accustomed to (Archaic)
If someone does a particular thing as is their wont, they do that thing often or regularly. Paul woke early, as was his wont. as is sb's wont used to say that it is someone's habit to do something. be wont to do sth to be likely to do something
âdet, alışkanlık, itiyat
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