Inveterate
//ɪnˈvɛtəɹɪt//
Translations of "inveterate" (18 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arabic | رَاسِخ(firmly established), عَرِيق(whose habits are firmly established), مُتَأَصِّل(firmly established), مُتَوَاصِل(firmly established), مُدْمِن(whose habits are firmly established), مُزْمِن(whose habits are firmly established) | rāsiḵ, ʕarīq, mutaʔaṣṣil, mutawāṣil, mudmin, muzmin | |
| Bulgarian | заклет(firmly established), закоравял(firmly established), закостенял(whose habits are firmly established) | zaklet, zakoravjal, zakostenjal | |
| Catalan | inveterat(firmly established), inveterat(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| Czech | nenapravitelný(whose habits are firmly established), notorický(whose habits are firmly established), vžitý(firmly established), zakořeněný(firmly established) | — | |
| Dutch | chronisch(firmly established), verstokt(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| French | invétéré(firmly established), invétéré(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| German | chronisch(firmly established), eingefleischt(whose habits are firmly established), tief verwurzelt(firmly established), unverbesserlich(whose habits are firmly established), unüberwindbar(firmly established) | — | |
| Ido | kustumala(firmly established) | — | |
| Irish | dobhogtha(whose habits are firmly established), doleigheasta(whose habits are firmly established), ársanta(firmly established) | — | |
| Italian | accanito(whose habits are firmly established), incallito(whose habits are firmly established), incorreggibile(whose habits are firmly established), inveterato(firmly established), inveterato(whose habits are firmly established), recidivo(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| Japanese | 常習の(whose habits are firmly established), 慢性の(firmly established), 根強い(firmly established), 根深い(firmly established) | jōshū no, mansei no, neduyoi, nebukai | |
| Latin | inveterātus(firmly established) | — | |
| Ottoman Turkish | اسكی(firmly established) | eski | |
| Polish | zakorzeniony(firmly established), zakorzeniony(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| Portuguese | inveterado(firmly established), inveterado(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| Russian | закорене́лый(firmly established), закорене́лый(whose habits are firmly established), заядлый(whose habits are firmly established) | zakorenélyj, zakorenélyj, zajadlyj | |
| Spanish | empedernido(whose habits are firmly established), incorregible(whose habits are firmly established) | — | |
| Swedish | inbiten(whose habits are firmly established), ingrodd(firmly established), inrotad(firmly established), oförbätterlig(whose habits are firmly established) | — |
رَاسِخ, عَرِيق, مُتَأَصِّل, مُتَوَاصِل, مُدْمِن, مُزْمِن
rāsiḵ, ʕarīq, mutaʔaṣṣil, mutawāṣil, mudmin, muzmin
inveterat, inveterat
nenapravitelný, notorický, vžitý, zakořeněný
chronisch, verstokt
invétéré, invétéré
chronisch, eingefleischt, tief verwurzelt, unverbesserlich, unüberwindbar
kustumala
dobhogtha, doleigheasta, ársanta
accanito, incallito, incorreggibile, inveterato, inveterato, recidivo
inveterātus
zakorzeniony, zakorzeniony
inveterado, inveterado
empedernido, incorregible
inbiten, ingrodd, inrotad, oförbätterlig
More for "inveterate"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.