Inhabitation [noun]

Definition of Inhabitation:

control, possession

Synonyms of Inhabitation:


Opposite/Antonyms of Inhabitation:


Sentence/Example of Inhabitation:

Only time will tell how well Emhoff inhabits his new position.

When you picture a dire wolf, the image that comes to mind is probably one of those unbelievably fluffy yet terrifying creatures that inhabited Winterfell in Game of Thrones.

A 2020 study of hippo-inhabited lakes found that nutrients in the animals’ feces were fueling huge blooms of bacteria and algae.

This platform allows you to not only host a party and talk to your guests over video call, but you can also create and decorate the indoor and outdoor spaces they’ll virtually inhabit.

Someday, I would inhabit this role of “surfer” I had envisioned for myself.

Von Däniken has long believed that aliens once inhabited the earth, and the tablets fit his theory that extraterrestrials helped ancient people evolve.

The legends of the discovery and inhabitation of Ireland before the Flood, are too purely mythical to demand serious notice.

As these two desiderata seem indispensable to lunar inhabitation, we may chiefly consider the question, Do these conditions exist?

Traces of Romano-British inhabitation have been noted elsewhere in Manchester, especially near the cathedral.

The Historie of Irelande from the first inhabitation thereof, vnto the yeare 1509.