No, that is a translation of the French form of the proverb. In English we say "Clothes do not make the man."
The correct idiomatic expression is "The habit does not make the monk." This means that a person's outward appearance or behavior does not necessarily reflect their true character or beliefs.
Are you referring to habit or habitat? Habit refers to our personal ways of doing things, while habitat means the environment an animal lives in.
"Accustomed" is the correct term. It means being familiar with something or having developed a custom or habit.
In French, "habit" is masculine.
The homophone for habit is rabbit.
Some people may correct others frequently due to a need for control, a desire to show superiority, or a genuine belief that they are helping. It could also be a habit formed from their upbringing or environment.
it is a habit of marines animals
That is the correct spelling of "habit", meaning "a routine or regular behavior."
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
The laxative habit begins innocently enough with the correct belief that bowels should move every day
You should probably contact Gambler's Anonymous.
habit formation
That is the correct spelling of the word "addiction".
what is a habit garde? what is a habit garde?
It is more commonly the other way around, but for both problems: habit and ignorance. They either always have and don't think about it, or they don't know what is correct and don't know they are wrong.
This Habit was created in 2005.
There habit is water and grass
"Winning is an habit" is not a right sentence. It should be winning is a habit.