Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Let me know what the habitant has to say for himself."
He had been in the blue room once again and he'd talked with the creature that was its habitant.
When a habitant was granted the title deed to a lot, he had to agree to accept a variety of annual charges and restrictions.
A habitant was essentially free to develop his land as he wished, with only a few obligations to his seigneur.
By ordinance of the Intendant in 1682, a habitant could not hold more than two rotures.
I'm trying to locate a habitant named Enrico Schultz.
I agree with Habitant.
There is a canned version by Habitant that is very good and popular around here (near Toronto)
The arrow sash was part of the traditional costume of the Lower Canada habitant at least from 1776 on.
Yet not to Earth are those bright luminaries Officious; but to thee, Earth's habitant.
Ah, if I were only a habitant of the Campagna five and twenty miles from Rome!
It was also part of the Acadian farming community which stretched along the Habitant River.
Mr Claybody, as a habitant of the great world, replied, "Very high in his own line.
The habitant assembled a neat log building in the French Canadian style of 'pièce-sur-pièce'.
Captain Alessandro says that a habitant on his way from his plantation saw the ship aground, and reported it to the garrison.
According to some, the producers would keep the Guadeloupe Habitant, of superior quality, for themselves and the rest, of lesser quality was exported.
The church played an important role in the life of a habitant; it was the parish that recorded all the births, marriages and deaths in the colony.
Said tokens included the image of a habitant on one side and the coat of arms of Montreal, along with the bank name, on the other.
But the usual habitant, elderly and wealthy, doesn't own one, doesn't need one, wouldn't know how to wear one.
The Habitant and Other French-Canadian Poems.
These dreams seemed not at all outr£ to Sukey, the in habitant of the inside surface of a twenty-kilometer-long spinning cylinder in space.
Alexis Tremblay: Habitant (1943) (also known as: "Terre de nos aïeux")
Adapted to fit the traditions of rural Quebec by transforming the European hero into Ti-Jean, a generic rural habitant, they eventually spawned many other tales.
"His first book of poetry, The Habitant (1897), was extremely successful, establishing for him a reputation as a writer of dialect verse that has faded since his death."