Synonym: disposition. Similar words: temperamental, tempera, temperance, temperature, intemperate, sacrament, sacramental, temper. Meaning: ['tempərəmənt] n. 1. your usual mood 2. excessive emotionalism or irritability and excitability (especially when displayed openly) 3. an adjustment of the intervals (as in tuning a keyboard instrument) so that the scale can be used to play in different keys.
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31, In temperament, she and her sister are poles apart .
32, In that we see Herbert's more easy-going temperament.
33, But they are very different in temperament.
34, By temperament Mr Putin always seeks to build consensus.
35, In outlook and temperament the brothers differed sharply.
36, He made no bones about displaying his artistic temperament.
37, You were probably born with tendencies toward that temperament.
38, Pete has a calm, quiet temperament.
39, He had such a good temperament.
40, His sobriety and temperament are questionable.
41, He hasn't got the best temperament for it.
42, Her brother Alex, two years older and much more robust in temperament,[http://sentencedict.com/temperament.html] was her bulwark against the world.
43, Wild knows how to lighten up and he does it with the digital mastery and temperament he has exhibited for many decades.
44, His calm, quiet temperament made him popular with his colleagues.
45, His mercurial and fickle temperament left him with few friends.
46, Dishonest people would now be free of the salutary fear which alloyed their admiration of the confiding temperament of tradesmen.
47, The most accurate way to assess an individual's temperament is by observing his expressions and behaviour.
48, Temperament and Activity People react in temperamentally different ways to the challenges posed by change.
49, Although there has been a great song and dance about his supposedly suspect temperament this season, I can't fault it.
50, Admittedly, Lewis Namier was reactionary by temperament, but was his influence on historiography also reactionary?
51, Gould's time was too precious and his ambition too overriding to allow him a thought for artistic temperament.
52, His looks, his temperament, his background - even his name marked him off for ridicule.
53, But London offered a solution not available elsewhere and particularly appealing to a young man of his temperament.
54, True, we were the two boys who did stand out from the other three by temper and temperament.
55, His is a temperament well calculated to flatter and intrigue readers in the early teens and to draw them into vicarious adventure.
56, Those who survive best emotionally do so partly by the gift of their inborn temperament.
57, A personalised healing programme will be devised to suit your temperament and specific needs.
58, She knew they were a light-saddle horse with a good disposition in spite of the spirited, fiery temperament.
59, Perhaps it was her artistic temperament - it was impossible to know for certain.
60, Aristotle further maintained that the four elements express themselves in the physique and temperament of the individual.
More similar words: temperamental, tempera, temperance, temperature, intemperate, sacrament, sacramental, temper, tempest, tempestuous, amendment, first amendment, lament, ornament, statement, firmament, lineament, tournament, employment, excitement, impediment, parliament, lamentably, ornamental, empowerment, impeachment, impedimenta, predicament, fundamental, lamentation.