Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "temperamentally"

Lexicographically close words:
temor; temper; tempera; temperament; temperamental; temperaments; temperance; temperat; temperate; temperately
  1. Artistically and temperamentally he was a Greek--a tired Greek.

  2. Temperamentally theirs was the French joy in the flesh.

  3. Temperamentally the Baileys were specialised, concentrated, accurate, while I am urged either by some Inner force or some entirely assimilated influence in my training, always to round off and shadow my outlines.

  4. Kerner's account of her childhood shows plainly that she was born temperamentally imaginative and unstable and that she was raised in an environment well calculated to exaggerate her imaginativeness and instability.

  5. She was temperamentally a controversialist, a propagandist.

  6. The two women were, moreover, temperamentally unlike.

  7. Cowperwood was not one who was temperamentally inclined to lose his head and neglect his business.

  8. They ran together temperamentally from the first like two leopards.

  9. Rousseau is indeed, temperamentally considered, one of the most passionately anarchical minds in the history of the race.

  10. Doubtless the great majority of these men are temperamentally predisposed to the unanchored, adventurous, migratory existence which they lead.

  11. Very often it happens that many good humorists are temperamentally far from gay, and laugh at their jokes only on the rebound, echoing the laughter which they provoke.

  12. Others in their fundamental constitution have remained dogmatic, intuitive only of personal attitudes or of subjective moods, temperamentally conservative and instinctive.

  13. And Mr Verloc, temperamentally identical with his associates, drew fine distinctions in his mind on the strength of insignificant differences.

  14. Mr Verloc was temperamentally no respecter of persons.

  15. They have become, in point of fact, mentally and temperamentally "provincial.

  16. And these evils would re-act inevitably far more cruelly--both temperamentally and materially--upon women and children than upon men.

  17. With the result that the vast majority of modern women are physically unfitted for, as an increasing number are temperamentally averse to the sex-relation--fons et origo of Life.

  18. Consequently he that is temperamentally disposed to anger is sooner incensed with anger, than he that is temperamentally disposed to desire, is inflamed with desire: and for this reason the Philosopher says (Ethic.

  19. He was also temperamentally distrustful of anything too feminine; and Mrs. Tallents Smallpeace was undoubtedly extremely feminine.

  20. He saw before him in this sanguine man, whose voice and eyes had such a white-hot sound and look, the incarnation of all that he temperamentally opposed.

  21. I do not believe that marriage confers the rights of ownership, and I loathe all public wrangling on such matters; but I am temperamentally averse to the harming of my neighbours, if in reason it can be avoided.

  22. He temperamentally regarded the evil of the day as quite sufficient to it.

  23. I am temperamentally Arminian as I am temperamentally Nominalist.

  24. Children with super-average intelligence are frequently seclusive and morons often seem to be temperamentally normal.

  25. Only about 7 per cent of the patients were both temperamentally and intellectually abnormal.

  26. Two of the three, Wade and Chandler, were temperamentally incapable of understanding Lincoln.

  27. Stanton was temperamentally just the man to become a good brother to Chandler and Wade.

  28. His wife also had had her hour of bitterness, but it was temperamentally impossible for Mrs Mallison to keep up an estrangement with any creature, male or female, who was on the wave of prosperity.

  29. He was not temperamentally a cold-blooded man, the latent strength of his nature made itself felt, despite the indifference of his pose, and Teresa was young and pretty and fresh.

  30. What is more, it was an assembly which Redmond found temperamentally congenial to him--an assembly which, apart from its relation to Ireland, he thoroughly admired and liked.

  31. Temperamentally and instinctively, he did not share it.

  32. It deprived him of a counsellor, and perhaps the only counsellor he had who temperamentally shared his own point of view.

  33. But he and the pedagogue are temperamentally different and apart.

  34. The long Austrian occupation perhaps did something to Germanise its physiognomy; though indeed this is an indifferent explanation when one remembers how well, temperamentally speaking, Italy held her own in Venetia.

  35. It is true that he was temperamentally averse to the use of force under ordinary circumstances.

  36. The mother was temperamentally nervous, was easily excited and became helpless the moment the baby objected, though she was a strong, robust, healthy woman.

  37. I mean by inefficiency, the quality of being temperamentally unsuited to the profession.

  38. It was temperamentally impossible for Amory to get the best marks in school.

  39. He was not quite as powerful as White, was the first impression, and later the idea got about that Eugene and White did not agree temperamentally and that White was the stronger and would win.

  40. He forgot, for the moment that she was not as remote and delicate in her beauty as Stella, that she was apparently not as passionate temperamentally as Margaret.

  41. She had not been temperamentally suited to him, but she had tried to be.

  42. These two, like Eugene and Summerfield, were temperamentally in accord, though Colfax was very much superior to Summerfield in his ability to command men.

  43. He was alienated temperamentally and emotionally.

  44. Temperamentally she must be enthusiastic and optimistic, but capable of sustained effort even in the face of apparent failure.

  45. The nurse is in many ways like the teacher, and the girl who has the right temperament for successful teaching will usually make a successful nurse, temperamentally considered.

  46. Daumier and Courbet, temperamentally unrelated to the French tradition, stem from the Dutch and the Spaniards.

  47. His art stemmed temperamentally from the Dutch and Spaniards, for while he imitated no one, he was unconsciously influenced by many.

  48. And he was temperamentally akin to Memling in such arrangements as the latter's The Casting of the Lots (a detail of Calvary) and Our Lord's Passion, at the Museum in Turin.

  49. Emile Bernard, an indifferent painter and writer, who temperamentally was not unlike Gauguin, claims priority for this manner of painting; but even if it were true, it would mean nothing.


  50. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "temperamentally" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.