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temperament
[ tem-per-uh-muhnt, -pruh-muhnt, -per-muhnt ]
noun
- the combination of mental, physical, and emotional traits of a person; natural predisposition.
- unusual personal attitude or nature as manifested by peculiarities of feeling, temper, action, etc., often with a disinclination to submit to conventional rules or restraints.
- (old physiology) the combination of the four cardinal humors, the relative proportions of which were supposed to determine physical and mental constitution.
- Music.
- the tuning of a keyboard instrument, as the piano, organ, or harpsichord, so that the instrument may be played in all keys without further tuning.
- a particular system of doing this.
- Archaic. an act of tempering or moderating.
- Archaic. climate.
temperament
/ -prəmənt; ˈtɛmpərəmənt /
noun
- an individual's character, disposition, and tendencies as revealed in his reactions
- excitability, moodiness, or anger, esp when displayed openly
an actress with temperament
- the characteristic way an individual behaves, esp towards other people See also character personality
- an adjustment made to the frequency differences between notes on a keyboard instrument to allow modulation to other keys
- any of several systems of such adjustment, such as just temperament, a system not practically possible on keyboard instruments, mean-tone temperament, a system giving an approximation to natural tuning, and equal temperament, the system commonly used in keyboard instruments, giving a scale based on an octave divided into twelve exactly equal semitones See also just intonation
- obsolete.the characteristic way an individual behaves, viewed as the result of the influence of the four humours (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile)
- archaic.compromise or adjustment
- an obsolete word for temperature
Word History and Origins
Origin of temperament1
Word History and Origins
Origin of temperament1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
"He is not competent by training, management skills, temperament or trust to have this job. He's just absolutely the wrong guy for it," Benjamin said.
The force said: "We are unsure of the dog’s temperament and advise the public not to approach it if it’s seen but to call us."
Despite that, FDR was disdained by former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. as having “a second-class intellect, but a first-class temperament.”
“Somebody Somewhere” and Brad are closer in temperament to who he truly is than the many gigantic personas he’s played in other shows.
They’re willing to overlook his glaring deficiencies of character and temperament — which of course is s statement about their values and their commitment to democratic principles.
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