Artificial intelligent assistant

dishabituate

dishaˈbituate, v.
  [f. dis- 6 + habituate v., prob. after F. déshabituer in same sense.]
  trans. To render unaccustomed, to disaccustom: the reverse of habituate.

1868 Browning Ring & Bk. ix. 1276 To dishabituate By sip and sip, this drainer to the dregs O' the draught of conversation. 1881 Contemp. Rev. Nov. 700 That talk and not action has been alone permitted to the clergy as a body has dishabituated them for the conduct of affairs.

Oxford English Dictionary

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