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or carir (pl).; carin, "I do (habitually)", is a personal form (with -n, a short suffix for "I, me").
I can still meet someone my age or even younger and think they're old; I habitually forget I'm almost 65.
It's a small thing, but it was something I habitually checked every morning, as I was getting dressed, to help me decide what to wear (see above re: Not a Style Guru).
Maybe he thought that the red blazer I habitually wore when I wasn't in uniform revealed some hitherto hidden experience at Butlin's.
Another charge, made against me, is that I habitually use the term "Israel Firster" to denounce those who are promoting Israel's positions on Iran and other issues over those of the United States.
Judging by its first two pages, that is — as I habitually do.
For instance, I habitually 'Like' things not because I am interested in them but to sort of 'reward' the person for posting something.
That didn't happen, and I habitually kept smoking dope, only now I was having mushroom flashbacks every time (not fun ones).
I'm a compulsive mouse clicker — I habitually click on text while reading articles — and this feature drives me crazy!
Looking at them, I experience a strange feeling of being reoriented within a position I habitually occupy, a realization of the scale and concentration of other human lives and how they overlap with my own.
I share on the web and then I habitually check to see how well what I shared is performing by counting the number of clicks, likes, retweets and comments I get.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com