Definition of "habitative"
habitative
adjective
comparative more habitative, superlative most habitative
(linguistics) Indicating the types of structures, shelters, places of worship, or organization of homes in a community.
Quotations
Another habitative term occurs in Castlethorpe, which was probably originally a simplex name from Old English throp, thought to denote a settlement initially dependent on a more important place.
1993, R. A. Croft, Dennis C. Mynard, Margaret Gelling, The Changing Landscape of Milton Keynes: Maps, page 47
Quotations
Thus, whatever idea, whatever purpose, whatever need, whatever fancy, predominates in him when he builds, it takes shape, it finds expression, it embodies itself, forthwith, in fitting material, fittingly contrived, and is, according to his habitative wish, his taste in a tabernacle, possibly a pig-sty, possibly a palace; for his range of invention stretches over every thing that lies between the two.
1854, Homes of American Statesmen, pages 183–184
According to the principle of subsidiarity, government should be as habitative as possible. Government functions must therefore be exercised at the most habitative level, as close as possible to those affected by the exercise of such functions.
2012, Koos Malan, Politocracy: An Assessment of the Coercive Logic of the Territorial State and Ideas Around a Response to it, page 282
In this chapter we shall examine the countryside more in habitative and economic terms: what were the settlement patterns, social structures and economic formations of the countryside?
2013, Simon Esmonde Cleary, The Roman West, AD 200-500: An Archaeological Study, page 264