Subliminal Talk

Full Version: DMSI 3.2 Random Musings and Journalings
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Random musing of the day:

Let's consider the concept of "habit", "habituality", "doing by habit". Habitus.

Now let's consider the concept of "inhabiting" and "inhibiting", also "habitability". Latin: "habeo", "prohibeo", etc. Note to self: check the morphologies.

Note to self: research "conceptual deconstruction".
(10-12-2018, 08:14 AM)Have at ye Wrote: [ -> ]Random musing of the day:

Let's consider the concept of "habit", "habituality", "doing by habit". Habitus.

Now let's consider the concept of "inhabiting" and "inhibiting", also "habitability". Latin: "habeo", "prohibeo", etc. Note to self: check the morphologies.

Note to self: research "conceptual deconstruction".

"habeo" is from "habere" "to have" and is much closer to the "habitus" you initially refer to. "Inhabit" (as it pertains to "residing" at least) is from "habitare" "to occupy or live in".
(10-12-2018, 06:51 PM)apollolux Wrote: [ -> ]
(10-12-2018, 08:14 AM)Have at ye Wrote: [ -> ]Random musing of the day:

Let's consider the concept of "habit", "habituality", "doing by habit". Habitus.

Now let's consider the concept of "inhabiting" and "inhibiting", also "habitability". Latin: "habeo", "prohibeo", etc. Note to self: check the morphologies.

Note to self: research "conceptual deconstruction".

"habeo" is from "habere" "to have" and is much closer to the "habitus" you initially refer to. "Inhabit" (as it pertains to "residing" at least) is from "habitare" "to occupy or live in".

Yeah, I've been dictionaring it up. Smile Thanks. I do want to check the morphology for these, as they started coming up as I was spitballing on the word "habit", and see whether the Pre-Indo-European root is the same.
(10-12-2018, 06:58 PM)Have at ye Wrote: [ -> ]
(10-12-2018, 06:51 PM)apollolux Wrote: [ -> ]
(10-12-2018, 08:14 AM)Have at ye Wrote: [ -> ]Random musing of the day:

Let's consider the concept of "habit", "habituality", "doing by habit". Habitus.

Now let's consider the concept of "inhabiting" and "inhibiting", also "habitability". Latin: "habeo", "prohibeo", etc. Note to self: check the morphologies.

Note to self: research "conceptual deconstruction".

"habeo" is from "habere" "to have" and is much closer to the "habitus" you initially refer to. "Inhabit" (as it pertains to "residing" at least) is from "habitare" "to occupy or live in".

Yeah, I've been dictionaring it up. Smile Thanks. I do want to check the morphology for these, as they started coming up as I was spitballing on the word "habit", and see whether the Pre-Indo-European root is the same.

Seems like a 50/50 shot that the Pre-Indo-European root could be the same or not, though last I checked Old Latin seemed to have made it a point to make "habere" vs "habitare" intentionally distinct from each other.
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