| INGRAIN | Firmly establish (eg, a habit) in a person |
| UNLEARN | Break a habit, in a way |
| TUNIC | Term for a bulb's papery covering - a habit in Roman times? (5) |
| BAD | Word before "Habit" in a Steve lacy song title or Habits" in an Ed Sheeran song title |
| NOVICE | No bad habit in a learner (6) |
| ACT | Whoopi Goldberg dons a habit in the comedy film, Sister ___ |
| INUNDATE | I go out with woman with a habit in Bury |
| USE | Cultivate a habit in American English |
| TOGA | It was a habit in Ancient Rome |
| SISTERACT | Whoopi Goldberg dons a habit in this 1992 comedy |
| DISHDASHA | Hurry after some food: a habit in Arab world |
| CHAPTER | From "caput", meaning "head", a titled division of a book or other written work; a distinctive period in history or in a person's life; or, a series of events forming an episode (7) |
| TRUSTY | Prisoner granted privileges in return for being well-behaved; or, a word meaning honest, as in a person, or reliable, as in a steed or an old car (6) |
| PRECIOUS | From "praise, price, prize", a word meaning costly or valuable, as in gems or gold; treasured, as in a person; or, in its ironic sense, affected, chichi, egregious, over-fastidious, twee or worthless |
| ABREAST | Run in a person who’s brutish in a row |
| INSTIL | To establish gradually but firmly in a person's mind (6) |
| TRUST | Confidence in a person or quality; guardianship/ward of a child; fiducial safekeeping of a property; or, the estate so managed for another (5) |
| AME | French word for "soul", as in a person or a vital part of a violin (3) |
| HEIMLICH | Henry J ___, American surgeon after whom a manoeuvre for dislodging a foreign body in a person's win |
| FAITH | Confidence in a person showing belief in doctrine |