full habit - traducción al árabe
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full habit - traducción al árabe

DISTINCTIVE SET OF GARMENTS WORN BY MEMBERS OF A RELIGIOUS ORDER
Habit (clothing); Monastic habit; Habit (monk); Habit (nun); Nun's habit; Nun habit; Monk's dress; Nun outfit; Religious habits; Abbatial habit; Cardinal's habit; Franciscan habit; Dominican habit; Carthusian habit; Passionist habit; Capuchin habit; Benedictine habit; Augustinian habit; Carmelite habit; Servite habit; Trappist habit; Trinitarian habit; Cistercian habit; Jesuit habit; Christian Brothers habit; Mercedarian habit
  • kesa}}), 1775–1825, [[LACMA]] textile collections
  • A nun of the [[Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration]] in her cloister.
  • [[Missionaries of Charity]] sisters in Haiti
  • Religious clothing includes habits
  • Traditional Roman Catholic nuns.

full habit      
‎ أُهْبَةٌ كامِلَة,أُهْبَةٌ سَكْتِيَّة‎
Full time job         
TYPE OF EMPLOYMENT OR STUDY IN WHICH A PERSON DEVOTES A MINIMUM NUMBER OF HOURS
Full time job; Full-time employee; Full-time work; Full time work
وظيفة كل الوقت
full stop         
  • A point used as a [[thousands separator]] on a sign in Germany
  • A [[New Testament]] manuscript with high dots as full stops
PUNCTUATION TO SIGNAL THE END OF A SENTENCE
Suspension mark; Fullstop; ﹒; Full stops; Period (grammar); 。; Dot on the line; ۔; Period (punctuation); ։; ።; ܁; ܂; Full-stop; (full stop).; .; "."; Grammatical stop; Full point; Full stop (punctuation); U+002E; Periodos; Komma (punctuation); U+3002; Period (punctuation mark); ؞; Period point; 。; ︒; Full stop (typography); Period (typography); Baseline dot; Period mark; Teleia; Greek full stop; Stigme teleia; Hypostigme; Full-point; Plain point; 𖫵; Period (point); Periods at ends of sentences; Periods at the ends of sentences; Dot (character); ASCII 46; \x2E; Hypostigmḗ; Stigmḕ teleía; &period
n. نقطة, علامة الوقف

Definición

habit
(habits)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
A habit is something that you do often or regularly.
He has an endearing habit of licking his lips when he's nervous...
Many people add salt to their food out of habit, without even tasting it first.
...a survey on eating habits in the UK.
N-VAR: oft N of -ing
2.
A habit is an action which is considered bad that someone does repeatedly and finds it difficult to stop doing.
A good way to break the habit of eating too quickly is to put your knife and fork down after each mouthful...
After twenty years as a chain smoker Mr Nathe has given up the habit.
N-COUNT: oft N of -ing
3.
A drug habit is an addiction to a drug such as heroin or cocaine.
She became a prostitute in order to pay for her cocaine habit.
N-COUNT: supp N
4.
A habit is a piece of clothing shaped like a long loose dress, which a nun or monk wears.
N-COUNT
5.
If you say that someone is a creature of habit, you mean that they usually do the same thing at the same time each day, rather than doing new and different things.
PHRASE: creature inflects, usu v-link PHR
6.
If you are in the habit of doing something, you do it regularly or often. If you get into the habit of doing something, you begin to do it regularly or often.
They were in the habit of giving two or three dinner parties a month...
I got into the habit of calling in on Gloria on my way home from work.
PHRASE: v-link PHR -ing
7.
If you make a habit of doing something, you do it regularly or often.
You can phone me at work as long as you don't make a habit of it.
PHRASE: V inflects, PHR -ing/n

Wikipedia

Religious habit

A religious habit is a distinctive set of religious clothing worn by members of a religious order. Traditionally some plain garb recognizable as a religious habit has also been worn by those leading the religious eremitic and anchoritic life, although in their case without conformity to a particular uniform style.

Uniformity and distinctiveness by order often evolved and changed over time. Interpretation of terms for clothes in religious rules could change over centuries. Furthermore, every time new communities gained importance in a cultural area the need for visual separation increased for new as well as old communities. Thus, modern habits are rooted in historic forms, but do not necessarily resemble them in cut, colour, material, detail or use.

In Christian monastic orders of the Catholic, Lutheran and Anglican Churches, the habit often consists of a tunic covered by a scapular and cowl, with a hood for monks or friars and a veil for nuns; in apostolic orders it may be a distinctive form of cassock for men, or a distinctive habit and veil for women. Catholic Canon Law requires only that the garb of their members be in some way identifiable so that the person may serve as a witness of the Evangelical counsels.

In many orders, the conclusion of postulancy and the beginning of the novitiate is marked by a ceremony, in which the new novice is accepted as a novice and then clothed in the community's habit by the superior. In some cases the novice's habit will be somewhat different from the customary habit: for instance, in certain orders of women that use the veil, it is common for novices to wear a white veil while professed members wear black, or if the order generally wears white, the novice wears a grey veil. Among some Franciscan communities of men, novices wear a sort of overshirt over their tunic; Carthusian novices wear a black cloak over their white habit.