temper的意思和读音

temper

: [ˈtempər] : [ˈtempə(r)]

n.

v.使使使

tempers  tempering  tempered  

adj.+n.bad temper,good temper,hot temper,violent temper,quick temper

v.+n.lose temper,keep temper

v.intensify

v.moderate,mitigate,alleviate,soften,lighten

n.anger,rage,bad mood,mood,sulk

tempern.

1.[c][ususing][u]if sb has atemper , they become angry very easily

a violent/short/quick, etc. temper

He must learn to control his temper .

She broke the plates in a fit of temper .

After an hour of waiting, tempers began to fray(= people began to get angry) .

2.[c][ususing]a short period of feeling very angry

to fly into a temper

She says awful things when she's in a temper .

3.[c]the way that you are feeling at a particular time

Come back when you're in a better temper.

to be in a bad/foul, etc. temper

4.having a particular type of temper

good-/bad-tempered

a sweet-tempered child

IDM

She lost her temper with a customer and shouted at him.

I struggle to keep my temper with the kids when they misbehave.

lose/keep your temper (with sb)to fail/manage to control your anger

She lost her temper with a customer and shouted at him.

I struggle to keep my temper with the kids when they misbehave.

v.

1.~ sth (with sth)使使to make sth less severe by adding sth that has the opposite effect

Justice must be tempered with mercy.

2.~ sth使to make metal as hard as it needs to be by heating and then cooling it

n.1.;,2.();();();,;;;;3.,;,,4.,5.;;6.,,1.;,2.();();();,;;;;3.,;,,4.,5.;;6.,,

v.1.();;【使;();【】()2.,使,;,3.;()

n.1.a tendency to get angry very quickly2.a particular emotional state or mood; an extremely angry state

v.1.to make steel hard by heating it and then making it cold2.to make something less strong or extreme, especially by adding something that has the opposite effect

1. tempo n ( temper n v. temperament n ...

2. 〖 everytime〗 temper〖 seeyoulater〗 ...

3. tend vi. temper n. bulletin n. ...

4. utmost ; temper ;, vacant ; ...

5. telephone v. temper temperature ...

6. humor , , temper in a bad skin adv. ...

7. wear v. temper n. ;(); wage v. () n. ...

8. anatomic temper temporal ...

:,,,,,使,使,使,,,

1.Henrietta was known for her discreet and even temper, but she must also have had sharp elbows.

2.Losing one's temper is often seen as a sign of weakness.

3.My mother said that I was a quick temper, in her belly nine months less than to just sit to bear it out.

4.I don't care to say much to her, as she is evidently out of temper.

5.Next to the Age of Silver came that of brass, more savage of temper and readier for the strife of arms, yet not altogether wicked.

6.He was a man of violent temper Goethe, the great German poet, called him an "utterly untamed personality. "。”

7.When a man's temper gets the best of him, it reveals the worst of him.

8.but a sanguine temper, for ever expecting more good than occurs, does not always pay for its hopes by any proportion of depression.

9.The man was as strong as a horse, and his temper was as fierce as he was strong.

10.I realize she can be very annoying , but all the same I think you should apologize for losing your temper with her .