accustomary
English
Etymology
From accustom + -ary.
Adjective
accustomary (comparative more accustomary, superlative most accustomary)
- Usual; customary. [from 16th c.]
- c. 1645, Featley, Dippers Dipt
- Christ, in the fifth of Matthew, forbiddeth not all kind of swearing, but the ordinary and accustomary swearing then in use among the Jews.
- 1790, Jane Austen, ‘Love and Freindship’, Juvenilia:
- Of every accomplishment accustomary to my sex, I was Mistress.
- c. 1645, Featley, Dippers Dipt