But the mutiny, if alarming, was kept within moderate bounds and under control by the mutineers; it was temperately met and temperately dealt with by Lord Howe, and it soon came to an end.
You think that no good would result from the argument however temperately conducted it might be, assigning the pride of peculiarity, and the influence of party views as sufficient barriers to prevent success.
In confirming the opinion, that "disputes however temperately conducted, are rarely productive of any good.
When have you evertemperately tried to set me aright, seeing my errors?
Now, it is all very well for once in a way; it might pall if frequently repeated; even recurring only annually, it must be observed temperately and enjoyed moderately.
In a laburnum-clad villa in the Parks we can afford to reason very temperately about life in cities where five families camp in one room.
Sides of bacon, however, may betemperately acquired.
Mackintosh replied to him temperately in the Vindiciae Gallicae, and Thomas Paine replied to him less temperately but far more trenchantly and more shrewdly in the Rights of Man.
In a laburnum-clad villa in The Parks we can afford to reason very temperately about life in cities where five families camp in one room.
The sun of a bright day from which, however, something of the fervors of midsummer were wanting, fell temperately on them all, filled the air on all sides with the utterances of life, and gleamed on the long line of ocean.
And does not he who does his duty acttemperately or wisely?
He puts the matter so temperately and plainly that the most obtuse could not fail to see the reasonableness of it.
It declared temperately but firmly, that he would perform the duties which his oath of office required of him, but he would not begin a war: if war came the aggressors must be those of the other side.
Arthur Thomson, in his volume on Heredity (1908), vigorously and temperately pleads (p.
Northcote has very temperately and sensibly discussed the question of the nude in art from the standpoint of Christian morality.
This impulse, like other human impulses, tends under natural conditions to develop temperately and wholesomely.
Shall these things be, and the blood still continue to run coolly and temperatelythrough your veins!
My blood beat temperately with the pulse of youth and health.
Manna, is temperately hot, of a mighty dilative quality, windy, cleanses choler gently, also it cleanses the throat and stomach.
They are temperately hot, the greater provokes urine and the menses, helps the stranguary, stays rheums in the head, and takes away the pricking pains thereof.
Of Bur, Clot-bur, or Burdock, temperatelyhot and dry.
As death was 'the end of all,' life was to be temperately enjoyed while it lasted, and resigned when necessary, with cheerful composure.
The letter to the Lord Mayor is in the Times, and the measure is temperately approved of.
There was a widespread dissatisfaction among the people generally, not always temperately expressed, and years were required to remove the apprehension so incontinently formed.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "temperately" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: dispassionately; easy; evenly; judiciously; moderately; soberly; sparingly; steadily