Temper Sentence Examples

temper
  • Her temper rose with her voice.

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  • His temper was rising by the second.

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  • At least he was trying to control his temper this time.

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  • She wasn't about to lose her temper again.

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  • The old prince was in a good temper and very gracious to Pierre.

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  • Temper made her brave and she lifted her head.

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  • I'm afraid I lost my temper with him.

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  • In total loss of her temper, she marched over and stomped on the phone, grinding it under her boot heel.

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  • The old man was in a good temper after his nap before dinner.

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  • She clamped a lid on her temper and turned the fire down to simmer.

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  • By the time she reached the chicken coop, her fit of temper was mellowing.

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  • She should shut the door, but her temper flared.

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  • The flurry of words left before she could temper them.

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  • The temper of this assembly was, however, wholly different.

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  • This time she marched toward the kitchen, her temper rising with every step.

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  • He does have a formidable temper, you know.

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  • I lost my temper and said things I didn't mean.

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  • Josh simply didn't realize how strong he was — and he had a terrible temper.

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  • There may be, as we think there is, the greatest difference in their value, and the temper is not the same, nor the method.

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  • Temper, Jessi! she berated herself, aware of what happened if she pissed him off.

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  • Xander sat on the bench until he regained his temper.

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  • If Alex tried to tell him what to do, Josh might lose his temper.

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  • She left the phone on the floor as a reminder to control her temper.

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  • Her temper was legendary in her household.

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  • Losing her temper wasn't going to get her anywhere, especially now that she knew he was trying to provoke her.

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  • He showed indeed none of the avaricious temper so common among the politicians of the time.

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  • The tiny, withered, sickly body of Bem was animated by an heroic temper.

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  • Age mellowed her temper, and she turned more and more from secular ambitions to charity and religious works.

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  • Grindal indeed attempted a reform of the ecclesiastical courts, but his metropolitical activity was cut short by a conflict with the arbitrary temper of the queen.

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  • The prevalent winds, which temper the heat, are the S.E.

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  • From the testimony of his pupil, and the still more conclusive evidence of his own correspondence with the father, Pavilliard seems to have been a man of singular good sense, temper and tact.

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  • His moderation, good sense, wisdom, temper, firmness and erudition made him as successful in this position as he had been when professor of theology, and he speedily surrounded himself with a band of scholarly young men.

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  • But such a temper of mind is much more akin to scepticism than to mysticism; it is characteristic of those who either do not feel the need of philosophizing their beliefs, or who have failed in doing so and take refuge in sheer acceptance.

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  • Though patient and good-tempered in the main, they have a latent warmth of temper, and if oppressed beyond a certain limit they would fiercely turn upon their tormentors.

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  • There is told of him a story which illustrates the temper of the early humanistic revival in Italy.

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  • The news of the strengthening of the British army and navy lately announced in the king's speech had perhaps annoyed him; but seeing that his outbursts of passion were nearly always the result of calculation - he once stated, pointing to his chin, that temper only mounted that high with him - his design, doubtless, was to set men everywhere talking about the perfidy of Albion.

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  • This outburst of temper was a grave blunder.

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  • On arriving at Paris three days after Waterloo he still clung to the hope of concerting national resistance; but the temper of the chambers and of the public generally forbade any such attempt.

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  • During this period of diplomatic work he acquired an exceptional knowledge of the affairs of Europe, and in particular of Germany, and displayed great tact and temper in dealing with the Swedish senate, with Queen Ulrica, with the king of Denmark and Frederick William I.

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  • This naive temper of the middle ages is nowhere more conspicuously displayed than in the Feast of the Ass, which under various forms was celebrated in a large number of churches throughout the West.

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  • His temper was irritable, his habits penurious and solitary.

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  • Born at Rome, she was the daughter of Francesco Cenci (1549-1598), the bastard son of a priest, and a man of great wealth but dissolute habits and violent temper.

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  • His temper was naturally that of a trimmer; and he had thus many qualifications for the writing of well-informed and unbiassed history.

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  • On the other hand they are generally written by men of affairs - governors, secretaries or ambassadors; and a fatalistic temper leads their authors to a certain impartial recording of everything, good or evil, which seems of moment.

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  • By legislative enactment whites and blacks living in adultery are to be punished by imprisonment or fine; divorces may be secured only after two years' residence in the state and on the ground of physical incapacity, adultery, extreme cruelty, habitual indulgence in violent temper, habitual drunkenness, desertion for one year, previous marriage still existing, or such relationship of the parties as is within the degrees for which marriage is prohibited by law.

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  • The temper of the times, a vague discontent with the established order of things, and some political enthusiasm imbibed from the writings of Rousseau, are the best reasons which can now be assigned for Gallatin's desertion of home and friends.

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  • His perfect command of temper, his moderation of speech and action, in a bitterly personal age, never failed, and were his most effective weapons; but he made his power felt in other ways.

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  • And though Bede makes no pretensions to originality, least of all in his theological works, freely taking what he needed, and (what is very rare in medieval writers) acknowledging what he took, "out of the works of the venerable Fathers," still everything he wrote is informed and impressed with his own special character and temper.

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  • But, though of an unambitious and peace-loving temper, the very conditions of his empire made war inevitable.

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  • But this " critical value " of the force is found to depend in an unexpected manner upon the hardness of the steel; the critical value diminishes as the hardness becomes greater up to a certain point, corresponding to a yellow temper, after which it increases and with the hardest steel becomes very high.

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  • For steel which has been made redhot, suddenly cooled, and then let down to a yellow temper, the critical value of the magnetizing force is smaller than for steel which is either softer or harder; it is indeed so small that the metal contracts like nickel even under weak magnetizing forces, without undergoing any preliminary extension that can be detected.

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  • On his accession to the throne in 1840 much was expected of a prince so variously gifted and of so amiable a temper, and his first acts did not belie popular hopes.

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  • The climate of Sydney is mild and equable; in summer sea breezes blow from the north-east, which, while they temper the heat, make the air exceedingly humid; in winter the winds blow from the west and the climate is dry and bracing.

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  • Richard of St Victor, prior of the monastery from 1162 to 1173, is still more absorbed in mysticism, and his successor Walter loses his temper altogether in abuse of the dialecticians and the Summists alike.

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  • The chief exponent of this temper was the Pesti Hirlap, Hungary's first political newspaper, founded in 1841 by Kossuth, whose articles, advocating armed reprisals if necessary, inflamed the extremists but alienated Szechenyi, who openly attacked Kossuth's opinions.

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  • Many critics ascribe it to an unknown Lucius Caecilius; there are certainly serious differences of grammar, style and temper between it and the writings already mentioned.

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  • He had by nature what he himself called a " vulnerable temper and impetuous moods."

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  • It was easy enough to see the " vulnerable temper " as it worked within, but it was never suffered to find audible expression.

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  • One naturally expects to find, and one does find, that this moral sunshine is associated with good temper.

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  • If experience develops incompatibility of temper or some other mutually repellent characteristic, separation follows as a matter of course.

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  • His work, which appeared in three parts, entitled respectively History of the Rise of the Huguenots of France (2 vols., 1879), The Huguenots and Henry of Navarre (2 vols., 1886), and The Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (2 vols., 1895), is characterized by painstaking thoroughness, by a judicial temper, and by scholarship of a high order.

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  • The vehemence of his temper was controlled by an affectionate disposition.

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  • It was, however, due to his haughty and violent temper that the traditional friendly relations between Turkey and France were broken.

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  • The description is justified not so much by any philosophical quality in his method as by the nature of his subject and his own temper.

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  • In his dispute with his brother, in his controversies with the English and Scottish mathematicians, and in his harsh and jealous bearing to his son Daniel, he showed a mean, unfair and violent temper.

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  • His first charge as primate on "Disputes in the Church" was felt to be a most powerful plea for a more catholic and a more charitable temper, and again and again during the closing years of his life he came back to this same theme.

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  • The result was a treatise in which he deduced practical conclusions from the past history and present temper of the city, blending these with his favourite principles of government in general.

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  • This was but in accordance with the temper of the times.

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  • Thus the temper of the book on this question demands some date after A.D.

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  • Yet, on the other hand, our author's attitude to the world reflects the temper of Judaism rather than that of Christianity.

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  • On the 4th of May the temper of the council on the doctrinal questions in dispute was fully revealed in its unanimous condemnation of Wycliffe, especially of the so-called "forty-five articles" as erroneous, heretical, revolutionary.

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  • Although it would seem that her masterful temper exercised a sensible influence upon her husband's gentler character, her role during his reign (1223-1226) is not well known.

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  • The modern Roman Catholic temper must be eager to believe and eager to submit.

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  • This corruption was fatally apparent in the army, the feudal basis of which was sapped by the confiscation of fiefs for the benefit of nominees of favourites of the harem, and by the intrusion, through the same influences of foreigners and rayahs into the corps of janissaries, of which the discipline became more and more relaxed and the temper increasingly turbulent.

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  • The picture exactly suited the temper of the times, and was an immense success.

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  • The 6th is related to degrees of courage, resolution, rashness or timidity; the 7th indicates sensitiveness, morality, good conduct, or immorality, overbearing temper and self-will.

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  • These specific differences revealed different religious tendencies,' the one type being more warmly Evangelical, the other more " rational " and congenial in temper with 18th-century Deism.

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  • A strong will enabled him to overcome the passionate temper which marked his youth, and later in his career a habit of intemperance, which he at first shared with many public men of his time.

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  • A widespread agitation was the outcome, and the temper of the people, of what became known as the " Red Kingdom," was displayed in the elections of 1903 to the German imperial parliament, when, under the system of universal suffrage, of 23 members returned 22 were Social Democrats.

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  • But her frank recklessness, her generosity, her invariable good temper, her ready wit, her infectious high spirits and amazing indiscretions appealed irresistibly to a generation which welcomed in her the living antithesis of Puritanism.

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  • Of his character we have an interesting notice from Whitelocke, who refused to accompany him on the ground of his " overruling temper and height."

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  • Though impatient in temper and occasionally rude, he was tender-hearted and generous.

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  • But no sooner had he taken over the command than his haughty and domineering temper estranged him both from his second-in-command, Lord Granby, and the commander-in-chief, Prince Ferdinand.

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  • In the suspicious temper of the times this vacillating policy was doubly fatal.

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  • Its temper was not critical, but aggressively practical.

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  • On the 10th of May he renewed, in the National Assembly, his proposal for a ministry of labour, but the temper of the majority was hostile to socialism, and the proposal was again rejected.

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  • His education at the Spanish court and an hereditary tendency to insanity, however, made him haughty, suspicious and consequently very unpopular, while even in his best days the temper of his mind was that of a recluse rather than of a ruler.

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  • His reactionary conservative temper was in complete harmony with the views of Bismarck and the emperor William, and with their powerful support he attempted, in defiance of modern democratic principles and even of the spirit of the constitution, to re-establish the old Prussian system of rigid discipline from above.

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  • Eugenius was dignified in demeanour, but inexperienced and vacillating in action and excitable in temper.

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  • The conduct of Lord Cochrane, as he was called till the death of his father, was brilliant and was rewarded by the order of the Bath, but his aggressive temper led him into making attacks on the admiral which necessitated a court-martial on Gambier.

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  • Cheyne worked indefatigably as a resourceful pioneer, but for many years, in view of the prevailing temper,.

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  • From about 1880 the prevailing temper had changed; within a decade of this date the change had become great; since then the influence of Old Testament criticism has grown with increased acceleration.

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  • The development of doctrine in St Paul's epistles is due in part to the gradual subsiding of the eschatological temper, but even more to the growth of controversy.

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  • Among causes for absolute divorce are adultery, desertion for one year, habitual drunkenness for one year, cruelty, ungovernable temper, physical incapacity at time of marriage, and the joining by either party of any religious sect which regards marriage as unlawful.

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  • The presence of such dewlaps in lizards is always a sign of an excitable temper.

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  • Boniface, though a man of violent temper and too often absent from his see, showed some sympathy with the reforming party in the English church.

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  • Both his talents and his temper made him utterly indisposed to maintain the attitude supposed to be incumbent on a republican president; and his tongue was never a carefully governed one.

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  • Even as the minister of a constitutional monarch his intolerance of interference or joint authority, his temper at once imperious and intriguing, his inveterate inclination towards brigue, that is to say, underhand rivalry and caballing for power and place, showed themselves unfavourably; and his constant tendency to inflame the aggressive and chauvinist spirit of his country neglected fact, was not based on any just estimate of the relative power and interests of France, and led his country more than once to the verge of a great calamity.

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  • He arrived at Basel, on the 4th of January 1 433, and his unyielding temper and bitter words probably did much to prevent a settlement.

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  • His temper was what the French happily call a difficult one, and his life was consequently enlivened or disturbed by various literary quarrels.

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  • To learn something of his Christian temper we must read the De oratione and the De patientia.

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  • He took no pains to temper the zeal of his legates, but incited them to the struggle, and, not content with prohibiting lay investiture and simony, expressly forbade prelates and even priests to pay homage to the civil power.

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  • In November of that year he fled in disguise from his capital to Gaeta, in the kingdom of Naples, and when French arms had made feasible his restoration to Rome in April 1850 he returned in a temper of stubborn resistance to all reform; henceforth he was no longer open to the influence of men of the type of Rossi or Rosmini, but took the inspiration of his policy from Cardinal Antonelli and the Jesuits.

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  • But he had neither the training nor the temper of a statesman.

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  • Her mother educated her in strict seclusion, but seclusion altogether failed to tame her imperious and ambitious temper.

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  • These positions, though Grotius's religious temper did not allow him to rely unreservedly upon them, yet, even in the partial application they find in his book, entitle him to the honour of being held the founder of the modern science of the law of nature and nations.

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  • Endowed by inheritance with a rich religious character, evangelical traditions, ethical temper and strong intellect, he developed, by wide reading in ancient and modern literature, a personality and attitude of mind which appealed to the characteristic thought and life of the period.

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  • The regent, without his father's coarseness, had a full share of his arbitary and avaricious temper.

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  • He obtained a high reputation, but his work was impaired by his controversial temper, which frequently developed into an irritated f anaticism, though he was always entirely sincere.

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  • But Henry, despite a violent and capricious temper, had a strong taste for the work of a legislator and administrator.

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  • He could, never forgive Gustavus for having forestalled the revolution, and his morbidly irritable and suspicious temper saw slights and insults in the most innocent conjunctures.

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  • But the zeal of the Portuguese took too often a one-sided direction, repressing the Syrian Christians on the Malabar coast, and interfering with the Abyssinian Church,3 while the fanatic temper of the Spaniard consigned, in Mexico and Peru, multitudes who would not renounce their heathen errors to indiscriminate massacre or abject slavery.'

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  • A screen of some kind to temper the fury of the blast is absolutely necessary.

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  • But his incurable corruption and unbridled temper so discredited the government that he was deprived of the post shortly after the accession of Anne.

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  • The moderation of his views and his conciliatory temper did much to heal the wounds left by civil and religious strife, and during his time the power and influence of the stadholderate attained their highest point.

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  • The molecular freedom which this high temperature gives enables the cementite to change gradually into a mixture of graphite and austenite with the result that, after the castings have been cooled and their austenite has in cooling past Aci changed into pearlite and ferrite, the mixture of cementite and pearlite of which they originally consisted has now given place to one of fine or " temper " graphite and ferrite, with more or less pearlite according to the completeness of the transfer of the carbon to the state of graphite.

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  • The reason is that the particles of temper graphite which are thus formed within the solid casting in its long annealing are so finely divided that they do not break up the continuity of the mass in a very harmful way; whereas in grey cast iron both the eutectic graphite formed in solidifying, and also the primary graphite which, in case the metal is hypereutectic, forms in cooling through region 3 of fig.

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  • In carrying out this process the castings are packed in a mass of iron oxide, which at this temperature gradually removes the fine or " temper " graphite by oxidizing that in the outer crust to carbonic oxide, whereon the carbon farther in begins diffusing outwards by " molecular migration," to be itself oxidized on reaching the crust.

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  • Thus, first, for the brittle glass-hard cementite there is gradually substituted the relatively harmless temper graphite; and, second, even this is in part removed by surface oxidation.

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  • The burglar's blow-pipe locally " draws the temper," i.e.

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  • Hume's cheerful temper, his equanimity, his kindness to literary aspirants and to those whose views differed from his own won him universal respect and affection.

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  • Even my love of literary fame, my ruling passion, never soured my temper, notwithstanding my frequent disappointments.

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  • He was extremely popular at court, and in 1783, on the death of Archbishop Cornwallis, the king pressed him to accept the primacy, but Hurd, who was known, says Madame d'Arblay, as "The Beauty of Holiness," declined it as a charge not suited to his temper and talents, and much too heavy for him to sustain.

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  • He bore popular abuse and misrepresentation without the slightest murmur or sourness of temper.

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  • His temper was hot, kept under rigid control; his disposition tender, gentle and loving, with flashing scorn and indignation against all that was ignoble and impure; he was a good husband, father and friend.

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  • The art is now so well understood that, by careful attention to the currents, the expert warp farmer can temper his soil as he pleases.

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  • The effect of the privations and sufferings which he endured at this time was discernible to the last in his temper and his deportment.

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  • Continued adversity had soured Johnson's temper.

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  • To a man of Johnson's strong understanding and irritable temper, the silly egotism and adulation of Boswell must have been as teasing as the constant buzz of a fly.

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  • Mrs. Thrale rallied him, soothed him, coaxed him, and if she sometimes provoked him by her flippancy, made ample amends by listening to his reproofs with angelic sweetness of temper.

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  • But the Lutherans were absent from the diet, and the Romanists, although they voted help, displayed a very uncompromising temper towards their religious foes.

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  • He cherished the idea of German unity, but could conceive of it only in the form of the restored Holy Empire under the house of Habsburg; and so little did he understand the growing nationalist temper of his people that he seriously negotiated for a union of the Lutheran and Anglican, churches, of which the sole premature offspring was the Protestant bishopric of Jerusalem.

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  • The temper of William, in contradistinction to that of his brother, was pre-eminently practical; and he had the reputation of a brave, piously orthodox Prussian soldier.

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  • These reforms were practically confined to the central provinces of the monarchy; for in Hungary, as well as in the outlying territories of Lombardy and the Netherlands, it was recognized that the conservative temper of the peoples made any revolutionary change in the traditional system inadvisable.

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  • He shared to the full the autocratic temper of the Habsburgs, their narrow-mindedness and their religious and intellectual obscurantism; and the qualities which would have made him a kindly, if somewhat tyrannical, father of a family, and an excellent head clerk, were hardly those required by the conditions of the Austrian monarchy during a singularly critical period of its history.

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  • But in the actual temper of the Viennese the slightest concession was dangerous.

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  • No doubt, however, the temper in Athens was at that time predominantly warlike, and the surrender of the hoplites was a unique triumph.

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  • With this long process of political decline from Alexander to Diocletian correspond the inner changes in the temper of the Hellenic and Hellenistic peoples.

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  • His mother Khamko, a woman of extraordinary character, thereupon herself formed and led a brigand band, and studied to inspire the boy with her own fierce and indomitable temper, with a view to revenge and the recovery of the lost property.

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  • Frederick William, whose temper was by no means so ruthlessly Spartan as tradition has painted it,was overjoyed, and commissioned the clergyman to receive from the prince an oath of filial obedience, and in exchange for this proof of "his intention to improve in real earnest" his arrest was to be lightened, pending the earning of a full pardon.

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  • Moreover, with this masterful temper was joined an infirmity of purpose which ever let " I dare not wait upon I would," and which seized upon any excuse for postponing measures the principles of which he had publicly approved.

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  • Europe, in fact, owed much at this time to Alexander's exalted temper.

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  • His temper and life seem to have been remarkably free from all that was jarring, jealous and fretful; unless, indeed, we are to accept as true the account of his wife's character which represents her as having been no fit mate for him, but an incorrigible shrew and skinflint.

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  • Stanton had a violent temper and a sharp tongue, but he was courageous, energetic, thoroughly honest and a genuine patriot.

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  • He cast out the spirit of negation, and henceforth the temper of his misery was changed to one, not of " whining," but of " indignation and grim fire-eyed defiance."

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  • But he was often oblivious to the strain upon her energies, and had little command of his temper.

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  • He is not the only man whom absorption in work and infirmity of temper have made into a provoking husband, though few wives have had Mrs Carlyle's capacity for expressing the sense of injustice.

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  • A sturdy and stoical temper was developed in the nation, which later helped parliamentary England in the struggle against the crown (1643-1648).

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  • Her naturally high temper, wearied of treacheries and brow-beatings, now at last overcame her.

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  • Goethe's grandsons have been so repeatedly accused of having dis p layed a dog-in-the-manger temper in closing the Goethehaus to the public and the Goethe archives to research, that the charge has almost universally come to be regarded as proven.

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  • His own temper of mind was conservative and somewhat aristocratic, but he guided political development, often under circumstances of great difficulty, with singular fairness and conspicuous magnanimity.

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  • Jefferson did not read excesses in Paris as warnings against democracy, but as warnings against the abuses ' Jefferson did not sympathize with the temper of his followers who condoned the zealous excesses of Genet, and in general with the"'misbehaviour "of the democratic clubs; but, as a student of English liberties, he could not accept Washington's doctrine that for a self-created permanent body to declare" this act unconstitutional, and that act pregnant with mischiefs "was" a stretch of arrogant presumption "which would, if unchecked," destroy the country."6 John Basset Moore, American Diplomacy (New York, 1905)..

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  • Such a comparison measures also the relative judgment, temper and charity of these writers and Jefferson.

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  • Here he was obliged by the temper of his army to retrace his steps, and retreat to the Jhelum, whence he sailed down the river to its confluence with the Indus, and thence to Patala, probably the modern Hyderabad.

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  • Ali Vardi Khan died in 1756, and was succeeded by his grandson, Suraj-ud-Dowlah, a youth of only nineteen years, whose ungovernable temper led to a rupture Black Hole of Calcutta.

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  • She was a poet of delicate power, but also possessed a lofty enthusiasm, a high conception of purity and justice, and a practical temper which led her to concern herself 1 See under Lowell, John.

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  • They are often brilliant, and sometimes very penetrating in their judgment of men and books; but the most constant element is a pervasive humour, and this humour, by turns playful and sentimental, is largely characteristic of his poetry, which sprang from a genial temper, quick in its sympathy with nature and humanity.

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  • In this way the south of Italy, together with the adjacent island of Sicily, was converted into one political body, which, owing to the peculiar temper of its Norman rulers and their powerful organization, assumed a more feudal character than any other part of the peninsula.

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  • The warlike and vigorous temper of the Huns has led many writers to regard them as Turks.

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  • He represents the spirit and temper of the free American of that day, and it was a part of his way of thinking and acting that he put his whole life and interest into the conflict.

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  • No scientific discipline, however, with the doubtful exception of descriptive psychology, stands to gain anything from a temper like that of Hume.

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  • They had undermined the foundations of scientific certainty, and so far as the fecundity of contemporary science did not give them pause, were ready, notwithstanding the difference of their starting-point, to acquiesce in the formula as well as the temper of Pyrrhonism.

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  • But he seems to have prided himself on a certain humanity, or even generosity of temper, which led him to avoid putting his enemies to death, though he did not scruple to condemn Renaud of Dammartin to the most inhuman of imprisonments.

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  • He pictured the consequences of that temper of vengeance which animated the Parisian mob and was fatally controlling the policy of the Convention, and the prostration which would ensue to France after even a successful struggle with a European coalition, which would spring up after the murder of the king.

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  • The news of the events in Syria and especially of the deprivation of Mehemet Ali had produced in France what appeared to be an exceedingly dangerous temper; the French government declared that it regarded the maintenance of Mehemet Ali in Egypt as essential to the European balance of power; and Louis Philippe sought to make it clear to the British government, through the king of the Belgians, that, whatever might be his own desire to maintain peace, in certain events to do so would be to risk his throne.

    1
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  • It was, however, soon clear that Palmerston's diagnosis of the temper of the French bourgeois was correct; the clamour for war subsided; on the 4th of December the address on the Egyptian Question proposed by the government was carried, and peace was assured.

    1
    0
  • On the 28th of July 1683 she married Prince George of Denmark, brother of King Christian V., an unpopular union because of the French proclivities of the bridegroom's country, but one of great domestic happiness, the prince and princess being conformable in temper and both preferring retirement and quiet to life in the great world.

    1
    0
  • His attempt to test the temper of the army nearly leads to their return.

    1
    0
  • He also illustrates the possibility of arriving at rationalistic conclusions in theology without the slightest tincture of the rationalistic temper.

    1
    0
  • This has only been possible owing to the temper of the Oriental mind which, while clinging tenaciously to its rites, values dogma only in so far as it is expressed in rites.

    1
    0
  • The outward sign of this was the substitution of the Roman ritual for the English pre-Reformation use hitherto followed in the services, while English Roman Catholicism became increasingly ultramontane in temper, a tendency much strengthened under Cardinal Manning.

    1
    0
  • His prestige and his good qualities, carefully fostered by Seneca, made him popular, while his childish vanity, ungovernable selfishness and savage temper were as yet unsuspected.

    1
    0
  • But Seneca's fear lest Nero's sleeping passions should once be roused were fully verified, and he seems to have seen all along where the danger lay, namely in Agrippina's imperious temper and insatiable love of power.

    1
    0
  • Dante, medieval as his temper seems to us, chose Virgil for his guide, and ascribed his mastery of style to the study of Virgilian poetry.

    1
    0
  • Moreover, the temper of these more enlightened men was itself opposed to Italian indifference and immorality; it was pugnacious and polemical, eager to beat down the arrogance of monks and theologians rather than to pursue an ideal of aesthetical self-culture.

    1
    0
  • Humanism has never been in the narrow sense of that term Protestant; still less has it been strictly Catholic. In Italy it fostered a temper of mind decidedly averse to theological speculation and religious earnestness.

    1
    0
  • As there was nothing despotic in the temper of the ruling classes, nothing oppressive in English culture, the literature of that age evolved itself freely from the people.

    1
    0
  • About the year 1893 he began to publish short stories, some of which, such as Enris, The Fortress of Matthias, The Old Man of Korpela and Finland's Flag, are delicate works of art, while they reveal to a very interesting degree the temper and ambitions of the contemporary Finnish population.

    1
    0
  • In public he was of magnificent bearing, possessing the true oratorical temperament, the nervous exaltation that makes the orator feel and appear a superior being, transfusing his thought, passion and will into the mind and heart of the listener; but his imagination frequently ran away with his understanding, while his imperious temper and ardent combativeness hurried him and his party into disadvantageous positions.

    1
    0
  • Discipline was strict; the temper of the church was in accordance with the Old rather than the New Testament.

    1
    0
  • Prerogative and privilege came more than once into collision, the abuses of purveyance and wardship were made matters of conference, though the thorough discussion of them was deferred to a succeeding session; while James's temper was irritated by the objections brought against his favourite scheme of the Union, and by the attitude taken up by the House with regard to religious affairs.

    1
    0
  • The Cypriote temper, however, lacks originality; at all periods it has accepted foreign innovations slowly, and discarded them even more reluctantly.

    1
    0
  • In the excited temper of the times any defender of justification by faith was looked upon by the old school as heretical; and Pole, with the circle at Viterbo, was denounced to the Inquisition, with all sorts of crimes imputed to him.

    1
    0
  • He was still under attainder; and the temper of England was not yet ripe for the presence of a cardinal.

    1
    0
  • His splenetic temper and her volatility culminated in an open rupture in May 1814.

    1
    0
  • More and.more he learned from Cabanis and Helvetius to see in the will and the passions the determinants of intellectual life, and in the character and the temper the source of theories and beliefs.

    1
    0
  • Frederick, whose authoritative temper was at once offended by the independent tone of the Arnoldist party, concluded with the pope a treaty of alliance (October 16, 1152) of such a nature that the Arnoldists were at once put in a minority in the Roman government; and when the second successor of Eugenius III., the energetic and austere Adrian IV.(the Englishman, Nicholas Breakspear), placed Rome under an interdict, the senate, already rudely shaken, submitted, and Arnold was forced to fly into Campania (1155).

    1
    0
  • His aim, however, had been to find a via media between the old and new; his temper was essentially conservative, his imagination held captive by the splendid traditions of the medieval church, and he had no sympathy with the revolutionary attitude of the Reformers.

    2
    1
  • Then I took the doll, meaning to give it back to her when she had made the letters; but she thought I meant to take it from her, and in an instant she was in a temper, and tried to seize the doll.

    13
    12
  • You can equate West's "moments" as temper tantrums if you would like, because he has had a few.

    2
    1
  • Fortunately for both Kanye and his droves of fans, his positive actions and talent far outweigh his temper tantrums.

    2
    1
  • When Rob was part of the cast of The Surreal Life during season two and The Surreal Life Fame Games, his temper was evident.

    2
    1
  • He would just be some other chef losing his temper.

    2
    1
  • Anyone who's ever been guilty of catching a glimpse of any of the Brady shows on VH1, knows that Adrienne Curry has a bit of a temper.

    2
    1
  • Apparently, Mr. West couldn't hold his temper until he made it through security, where the photographers couldn't go without a boarding pass.

    2
    1
  • But he had not removed all dangerous members of the royal house, nor had he gauged the temper of the times or people.

    0
    0
  • This attitude brought him into conflict with the senate of the university, a conflict which Eck's masterful temper, increased by an extreme self-confidence perhaps natural in one so young and so successful, did not serve to allay.

    0
    0
  • The pulse-rate becomes very rapid, the extremities become warm, so that the patient is obliged to wear few clothes, the temper becomes irritable, the patient nervous, and a fine tremor is observed in the hands.

    0
    0
  • Of the two papers in defence of the Roman Catholic religion in Charles's own hand, published by James, Halifax says " though neither his temper nor education made him very fit to be an author, yet in this case.

    0
    0
  • According to Evelyn he was " debonnaire and easy of access, naturally kind-hearted and possessed an excellent temper," virtues which covered a multitude of sins.

    0
    0
  • The match was an unhappy one, owing partly to incompatibility of temper, but still more to the mischievous interference of the jealous queen-mother.

    0
    0
  • If the view of the satirist is owing to this circumstance more limited in some directions, and his taste and temper less conformable to the best ancient standards of propriety, he is also saved by it from prejudices to which the traditions of his class exposed the historian.

    0
    0
  • She had been brought up in a narrow retirement, could speak no language but her own, had no looks, no accomplishments and no dowry, her only recommendations being her proficiency in needlework, and her meek and gentle temper.

    0
    0
  • It does not, like Villehardouin, give us a picture of the temper and habits of a whole order or cast of men during a heroic period of human history; it falls far short of Froissart in vivid portraying of the picturesque and external aspects of social life; but it is a more personal book than either.

    0
    0
  • It holds up an almost perfectly level and spotless mirror to the temper of the earlier Renaissance.

    0
    0
  • Lord Palmerston was no orator; his language was unstudied, and his delivery somewhat embarrassed; but he generally found words to say the right thing at the right time, and to address the House of Commons in the language best adapted to the capacity and the temper of his audience.

    0
    0
  • Notwithstanding the zeal and ability which he had invariably displayed as foreign minister, it had long been felt by his colleagues that his eager and frequent interference in the affairs of foreign countries, his imperious temper, the extreme acerbity of his language abroad, of which there are ample proofs in his published correspondence, and the evasions and artifices he employed to carry his points at home, rendered him a dangerous representative of the foreign interests of the country.

    0
    0
  • From the first he displayed rare ability as a debater, his inspiring and yet amiable personality attracted hosts of admirers, while his extraordinary tact and temper disarmed opposition and enabled him to mediate between extremes without ever sacrificing principles.

    0
    0
  • He was indeed not at first a complete pessimist, but to be a preacher of Deuteronomy required a sanguine temper which a prophet of the school of Isaiah could not possess.

    0
    0
  • All that he allows is that the perception of natural beauty may, by its resemblance to the primary spiritual beauty, quicken the disposition to divine love in those who are already under the influence of a truly virtuous temper.

    0
    0
  • This was partly due to Lord Canning's personal inclination to temper justice with mercy, but partly also to the fact that there was no adequate European force at hand to execute a severer sentence.

    0
    0
  • To splendid beauty and activity of person he joined a winning charm of temper and manners, a tact for all societies, and an aptitude for all accomplishments.

    0
    0
  • Neither Leonardo's genius nor his noble manners could soften the rude and taunting temper of the younger man, whose style as an artist, nevertheless, in subjects both of tenderness and terror, underwent at this time a profound modification from Leonardo's example.

    0
    0
  • The truth is that the habit of thinking exclusively from the standpoint of the theory of knowledge tends to beget an undue subjectivity of temper.

    0
    0
  • His mortification was little likely to temper the habitual virulence of his pen, which rarely produced anything more acrimonious than the attacks he at this period directed against Burnet and his former friend Steele.

    0
    0
  • The more conservative temper of the Anglican and Lutheran communions, however, suffered the retention of such processions as did not conflict with the reformed doctrines, though even in these Churches they met with opposition and tended after a while to fall into disuse.

    0
    0
  • If he was imperious in temper and inflexible in his conception of the Christian faith, he possessed a great heart and a great intellect, inspired with an enthusiastic devotion to Christ.

    0
    0
  • Preserved from innovations by the mutual jealousy of rival potentates, as well as by the conservative temper of a pastoral population, Andorra has kept its medieval usages and institutions almost unchanged.

    0
    0
  • At first he prudently abstained from trying to force the issues in which he was interested, while he studied the temper and procedure of the Senate.

    0
    0
  • In 1879 he was appointed French ambassador at Bern, and in 1880 was transferred to London; but he lacked the suppleness and command of temper necessary to a successful diplomatist.

    0
    0
  • It was in the successful effort to open this treasure-house that Hamilton's mind received its final temper, " Des-lors it commenga a marcher seul," to use the words of the biographer of another great mathematician.

    0
    0
  • A shameless rake and a man of uncontrollable temper, his massacre of the people of Perugia after a rebellion in 1540 and the unspeakable outrage he committed on the bishop of Fano are typical of his character.

    0
    0
  • He was generally unpopular owing to his cruelty and violent temper.

    0
    0
  • It showed its temper by taking up the Ffrst work of the Good Parliament.

    0
    0
  • Northumberland had miscalculated the temper of the nation, and failed to kidnap Mary.

    0
    0
  • Indolent in his temper, James had been in the habit of leaving his patronage in the hands of a confidential favorite, and that position was now filled by George Villiers, marquess and afterwards duke of Buckingham.

    0
    0
  • In this irritated temper they took up the question of tonnage and poundage, and instead of confining themselves to the great public question, they called to the bar some custom-house officers who happened to have seized the goods of one of their members.

    0
    0
  • For though Great Britain was now isolated and her policy in Europe advertised as a failure, the temper of the British people was less inclined to peace in 1798 than it had been three years before.

    0
    0
  • In all these matters the House showed little enough of the revolutionary temper; so little, indeed, that in March Lord Durham resigned.

    0
    0
  • Scarcely less striking testimony to the constitutional temper of the English was given.

    0
    0
  • But the temper of the country was by this time excited, and it was loudly demanding something more than a preliminary success.

    0
    0
  • Such an enthusiastic temper does not lend itself to cool theory.

    0
    0
  • Their pacific temper exposed them to the raids of the Kirghiz, who compelled them first to settle in Dzungaria, then to move their dwellings several times, and ultimately (in 1742) to recognize the sovereignty of Russia.

    0
    0
  • The wardens usually conferred once a year on matters of common interest, and as a rule their meetings were conducted in a friendly spirit, though in 1575 a display of temper led to the affair of the Raid of Reidswire.

    0
    0
  • Under Owen scholastic studies were maintained with a formality and dogmatism unsuited to Locke's free inquisitive temper.

    0
    0
  • Revulsion from the dogmatic temper of the Presbyterians, and the unreasoning enthusiasm of the Independents favoured sympathy afterwards with Cambridge Platonists and other liberal Anglican churchmen.

    0
    0
  • And whenever he had to deal with this sort of folks, if he did not beforehand take a strong resolution of keeping his temper, he quickly fell into a passion; for he was naturally choleric, but his anger never lasted long.

    0
    0
  • After one or two petty encounters with the mob they were withdrawn, either because their temper was uncertain or because their commanders shunned responsibility.

    0
    0
  • The king of Sardinia having shown a hostile temper, Montesquiou made an easy conquest of Savoy.

    0
    0
  • They were thus driven to rely upon the armies, which also desired war and were becoming less and less civic in temper.

    0
    0
  • A Law of Hostages, which was really a new Law of Suspects, and a progressive income tax showed the temper of the majority.

    0
    0
  • Never since the outbreak of the Revolution had the public temper been so gloomy and desponding.

    0
    0
  • It is by their recognition of the duty of living consistently by theory instead of mere impulse or custom, their sense of the new value given to life through this rationalization, and their effort to maintain the easy, calm, unwavering firmness of the Socratic temper, that we recognize both Antisthenes and Aristippus as " Socratic men," in spite of the completeness with which they divided their master's positive doctrine into systems diametrically opposed.

    0
    0
  • At first he seems to have lived with the Florentine scholars on tolerably good terms; but his temper was so arrogant that Cosimo de' Medici's friends were not long able to put up with him.

    0
    0
  • His temper was irritable, and his hasty utterances exposed him to retorts which he did not readily forgive.

    0
    0
  • Archias lost his temper, and began to threaten.

    0
    0
  • Gundulph, his father, was by birth a Lombard, and seems to have been a man of harsh and violent temper; his mother, Ermenberga, was a prudent and virtuous woman, from whose careful religious training the young Anselm derived much benefit.

    0
    0
  • By his mildness of temper and unswerving rectitude, he so endeared himself to the English that he was looked upon and desired as the natural successor to Lanfranc, then archbishop of Canterbury.

    0
    0
  • The irritation of the disfranchised proletariat was moreover increased by the appalling dearness of bread and food generally, which the suspicious temper of the timesfomented by the tirades of Marat in the A mi du peupleascribed to English intrigues in revenge for the aid given by France to the American colonies, and to the treachery in high places that made these intrigues successful.

    0
    0
  • He was stoned to death, and Rehoboam realizing the temper of the people fled to Jerusalem and prepared for war.

    0
    0
  • The marriage was not a happy one, and after the birth of a son incompatibility of temper led to a separation, the count retiring to his estate on the Indre, where by an extravagant course of living he became hopelessly involved in debt.

    0
    0
  • Narvaez brought Spain through the troubled revolutionary years 1848 and 1849 without serious disturbance, but his own unstable temper, the incessant intrigues of the palace, and the inability of the Spaniards to form lasting political parties made good government impossible.

    0
    0
  • Even in the Liberal ranks the question aroused furious differences of opinion;Senor Montero Rios, the president of the senate, denounced the infamous attacks on the church; the government itself showed a wavering temper in entering on long and futile negotiations with the Vatican; while in January 1907 the cardinal archbishop of Toledo presented a united protest of the Spanish episcopate againit the proposed law.

    0
    0
  • Three main characteristics of a successful horse-breaker are firmness, good temper and incessant vigilance.

    0
    0
  • From youth to age he describes himself as gifted with a buoyant temper.

    0
    0
  • He was generous and charitable, of "a solid and masculine kindness," and of a temper hot, but completely under control.

    0
    0
  • His contemporaries, while admitting the excellence of his intentions as a statesman, lay stress upon his defects of temper and discretion.

    0
    0
  • He considered a cheerful temper to be more Christian than a melancholy one, and carried this spirit into his whole life.

    0
    0
  • Strangely enough, in this exile - rendered still more irksome by his father's mania for solitude and by his tyrannical temper - the genius of Octave Feuillet developed.

    0
    0
  • The second son, Charles Robert, a man of ability but of impracticable temper, a professed atheist and a recluse, died in 1884.

    0
    0
  • But his old confidence had left him; he had grown moody and suspicious, and his temper gave a ready handle to his enemies.

    0
    0
  • While his temper had become less aristocratic, his Liberalism had grown more tolerant.

    0
    0
  • His Dialogues philosophiques, written in 1871, his Ecclesiastes (1882) and his Antichrist (1876) (the fourth volume of the Origins of Christianity, dealing with the reign of Nero) are incomparable in their literary genius, but they are examples of a disenchanted and sceptical temper.

    0
    0
  • But it wasn't likely, given the demon lord's renowned temper and thirst for blood.

    0
    0
  • The Immortal had the temper of a demon, the power of a deity and the self-control of a child.

    0
    0
  • They may find a way to temper Anshan's defiance.

    0
    0
  • With every step toward the phone she told herself she shouldn't answer it – shouldn't lose her temper.

    0
    0
  • Josh simply didn't realize how strong he was — and he had a terrible temper.

    0
    0
  • It is a good idea to place them in an isolation apiary, until their temper and disease status can be assessed.

    0
    0
  • There were " Violent tornados of temper when he would lose himself " as Bond & Tobin put it, not continual aggravation.

    0
    0
  • The urns are often reduced with no visible temper, and often have stamped and incised decoration (lines scratched into the surface ).

    0
    0
  • He will temper the despotism of Nature by epigrams.

    0
    0
  • While his intentions were pure, he only became a dupe to his sanguine temper and his own theories.

    0
    0
  • He was high-spirited and had a very fiery temper, which led him at times to acts of cruelty.

    0
    0
  • If you happen to be the person whose temper flared, then prepare to face the consequences the next day at work.

    0
    0
  • By such means I supposed, I might temper peoples ' evident inclination to cast aspersions against my heterosexual identity.

    0
    0
  • Lisa just lost her temper and Liam was really miffed.

    0
    0
  • I suspect that the temper of the times is unlikely to ever again provide a more hospitable milieu for such a movement.

    0
    0
  • Attempts by the parents to insist on attendance result in heightened distress, or temper outbursts.

    0
    0
  • The Beast Husband and wife were in the midst of a violent quarrel, and hubby was losing his temper.

    0
    0
  • Plagiarism, womanizing, temper tantrums they're all there.

    0
    0
  • She was 18 years old and stunning, despite a few teenage temper tantrums!

    0
    0
  • Most children with marked temper tantrums will not grow up to be violent criminals.

    0
    0
  • She has the same independence, determination and fiery temper.

    0
    0
  • Proverbs chapter 14 (NLT) 29 Those who control their anger have great understanding; those with a hasty temper will make mistakes.

    0
    0
  • His mother, noted for her volatile temper, was descended from the Gordons, with their wild, bloodsoaked highland history.

    0
    0
  • At this time he began using the name Powell Powell had a reputation for having a violent temper.

    0
    0
  • Someone else tried fifty-two years later but he couldn't get up the side of the rock and left in a foul temper.

    0
    0
  • As a youngster Federer had a fierce temper, breaking rackets regularly and making himself thoroughly unpopular.

    0
    0
  • A little white lie here, a little unnecessary temper flare there - our culture doesn't see these as particularly bad things.

    0
    0
  • His violent temper soon compelled him to resign this appointment, and for two years he and his son earned a precarious livelihood by translations in London - a practical education, however, exceedingly useful to the younger Forster, who became a thorough master of English, and acquired many of the ideas which chiefly influenced his subsequent life.

    0
    0
  • Convinced that opposition to Babylonian rule was suicidal, and interpreting historical events, in the manner of the times, as indications of the temper of the deity, he held that the imminent political destruction of the nation was proof of Yahweh's anger with the people on account of their moral and religious depravity; Jerusalem was hopelessly corrupt and must be destroyed (xxiv.).

    0
    0
  • A violent temper, which he made no attempt to control or conceal, led him into trouble with his superiors.

    0
    0
  • The striking and universal success which crowned his work on the Suez Cknal gave him an absoluteness of thought which brooked no contradiction, a despotic temper before which every one must bow, and against which, when he had once taken a resolution, nothing could prevail, not even the most authoritative opposition or the most legitimate entreaties.

    0
    0
  • The bourgeois revolutionists of France had all been philosophes, but their philosophy had at least paid lip-service to " reason "; the Russian revolutionists who formed the majority of the first and second Dumas, as though inspired by the exalted nonsense preached by Tolstoi, 1 subordinated reason to sentiment, until - their impracticable temper having been advertised to all the world - it became easy for the government to treat them as a mere excrescence on the national life, a malignant growth to be removed by a necessary operation.

    0
    0
  • The " Cadets " commanded an overwhelming majority in the Lower House, and their intractable temper and ignorance of affairs became at once apparent.

    0
    0
  • Here it may suffice to mention, as illustrating the changed temper of the Russian national assembly, The Duma that the Russian majority of the Duma included and among the imperial questions in Finland which the Finland.

    0
    0
  • It was in reality sins and vices, however, rather than follies that came under his censure, and this didactic temper was reflected in Barclay.

    0
    0
  • As was written of him in The Times after his death, "his personal character carried immense weight, but his great position depended still more on the universally recognized fact that his belief in Christian truth and his defence of it were supported by learning as solid and comprehensive as could be found anywhere in Europe, and by a temper not only of the utmost candour but of the highest scientific capacity.

    0
    0
  • With his defects of temper, his violent antipathies, his extravagant notion of papal prerogative, his pontificate was filled with strife.

    0
    0
  • The military spirit was evolved, not in raids and massacres of the usual Asiatic type which create little but intense racial hatred, but in feuds between families and factions of the same race, which restrained ferocity and tended to create a temper like that of the feudal chivalry of Europe.

    0
    0
  • Among the educated Greeks rationalistic views of the old mythology had become so current that they could assimilate Alexander to Dionysus without supposing him to be supernatural, and to this temper the divine honours were a mere form, an elaborate sort of flattery.

    0
    0
  • In a speech delivered at Graaf Reinet, a Bond stronghold, on the 3rd of March 1898, he made it clear that he was determined to secure freedom and equality for the British subjects in the Transvaal, and he urged the Dutch colonists to induce the Pretoria government to assimilate its institutions, and the temper and spirit of its administration, to those of the free communities of South Africa.

    0
    0
  • He reversed the unfortunate ecclesiastical policy of his father, allowing a wide liberty of dissent, and releasing the imprisoned archbishop of Cologne; he modified the strictness of the press censorship; above all he undertook, in the presence of the deputations of the provincial diets assembled to greet him on his accession, to carry out the long-deferred project of creating a central constitution, which he admitted to be required alike by the royal promises, the needs of the country and the temper of the times.

    0
    0
  • If it contains a few parts of carbon per thousand, the annealing process, instead of softening the metal, gives it a "temper," meaning a higher degree of hardness and elasticity (see below).

    0
    0
  • His marriage in 1721 with Miss Brydges of Wallington, Surrey, led to an estrangement from his father, a person of somewhat morose temper, which terminated in 1723 after the death of the lady in giving birth to a son.

    0
    0
  • He had the sweet and patient temper which knew how to live, unrepining and unsoured, in the midst of the most watchful persecution, public and private; and it is wonderful how rarely he used his splendid rhetoric for the purposes of invective against the spirit and policy from which he must have suffered deeply, while, it may be added, he never hid an innuendo under a metaphor or a trope.

    0
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  • The Principe, it seems, had already begun to prejudice the world against him; and we can readily believe that Varchi sententiously observes, that "it would have been better for him if nature had given him either a less powerful intellect or a mind of a more genial temper."

    0
    0
  • Marcion's reaction, too, against the Judaic temper in the Church as a whole, in the interests of an extravagant Paulinism, while it suggests that Paul's doctrines of grace generally were inadequately realized in the sub-apostolic age, points also to the prevalence of such moralism in particular.

    0
    0
  • It demands physical strength, sound health, scrupulous cleanliness, good temper, self-control, intelligence and a strong sense of duty.

    0
    0
  • While in that rank he was led by his self-assertive temper into a quarrel with his superior, Lieutenant Philip Beaver (1766-1813), for which he was sent before a court-martial.

    0
    0
  • It was supposed in olden times to be the seat of ill-humour and melancholy, whence such phrases as "to have the spleen," to be out of temper, sulky, morose, "splenetic."

    0
    0
  • His father, Erik Johansson of Rydboholm, "a merry and jocose gentleman," but, like all the Swedish Vasas, liable to sudden fierce gusts of temper, was one of the senators who voted for the deposition of Archbishop Trolle, at the riksdag of 1517 (see Sweden, History), for which act of patriotism he lost his head.

    0
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  • This pose served to keep the democrats of the capital in a good temper, and so leave him free to consolidate the somewhat unstable foundation of his throne and to persuade his European fellow-sovereigns to acknowledge in him not a revolutionary but a conservative force.

    0
    0
  • Socially he was genial and courteous, though in argument he occasionally lost his temper.

    0
    0
  • Mrs Thrale rallied him, soothed him, coaxed him, and if she sometimes provoked him by her flippancy, made ample amends by listening to his reproofs with angelic sweetness of temper.

    0
    0
  • He had naturally a most cheerful and sunny temper, was highly social and sympathetic, loved pleasant conversation, wit, anecdote and laughter.

    0
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  • Molo, he says, rebuked his youthful extravagance and he came back " a changed man."' He returned to Rome in 77 B.C., and appears to have married at this time Terentia, a rich woman with a domineering temper, to whom many of his subsequent embarrassments were due.2 He engaged at once in forensic and political life.

    0
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  • This temper and the process in which it finds expression are well illustrated in the case of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception and in the authorization given to the cult of the Sacred Heart.

    0
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  • The king had now many opportunities of seeing Mme Scarron, and, though at first he was prejudiced against her, her even temper contrasted so advantageously with the storms of passion and jealousy exhibited by Mme de Montespan, that she grew steadily in his favour, and had in 1678 the gratification of having her estate at Maintenon raised to a marquisate and herself entitled Mme de Maintenon by the king.

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  • Small and slight in person and never robust in health, Robertson Smith was yet a man of ceaseless and fiery energy; of an intellect extraordinarily alert and quick, and as sagacious in practical matters as it was keen and piercing in speculation; of an erudition astonishing both in its range and in its readiness; of a temper susceptible of the highest enthusiasm for worthy ends, and able to inspire others with its own ardour; endowed with the warmest affections, and with the kindest and most generous disposition, but impatient of stupidity and ready to blaze out at whatever savoured of wrong and injustice.

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  • He realized that one of the most potent factors in the Milner situation was the attitude of the Cape Dutch, and in March 1898 at Graaff Reinet Milner called upon the Dutch citizens of the Cape, " especially those who had gone so far in the expression of their sympathy for the Transvaal as to expose themselves to charges of disloyalty to their own flag " to use all their influence, not in confirming the Transvaal in unjustified suspicions, not in encouraging its government in obstinate resistance to all reform, but in inducing it gradually to assimilate its institutions, and the temper and spirit of its administration, to those of the free communities of South Africa, such as Cape Colony or the Orange Free State.

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  • This may have been so to some degree; but Papias (whose name itself denotes that he was of the native Phrygian stock, and who shared the enthusiastic religious temper characteristic of Phrygia, see Montanism) was nearer in spirit to the actual Christianity of the sub-apostolic age, especially in western Asia, than Eusebius realized.

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  • He had a thorough knowledge of the private and indirect motives which influence politicians, and his genial attractive manner, easy temper and vivacious, if occasionally coarse, wit helped to confer on him a social distinction which led many to take for granted his eminence as a statesman.

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  • The sudden determination of those in power, who had hitherto advocated reform, to stereotype the existing system, closed the avenues of hope to those who had expected an improvement of their lot from constitutional changes, and the disaffected temper of the populace that resulted was taken advantage of by the London Corresponding Society, emboldened by its triumph in the courts, to organize open and really dangerous demonstrations, such as the vast mass meeting at Copenhagen House on the 26th of October.

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  • But Pitt's prodigious egoism, stimulated by the mischievous counsels of men of the stamp of Lord Shelburne, prevented the fusion of the only two sections of the Whig party that were at once able, enlightened and disinterested enough to carry on the government efficiently, to check the arbitrary temper of the king, and to command the confidence of the nation.

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  • But the royal attendants did not heed the animal's ill temper.

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  • She has a large, generous sympathy and absolute fairness of temper.

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  • Helen resisted, and Viney tried to force it out of her hand, and I suspect that she slapped the child, or did something which caused this unusual outburst of temper.

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  • On the day of Prince Vasili's arrival, Prince Bolkonski was particularly discontented and out of temper.

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  • Prince Andrew, glancing at Pierre, broke the silence now and then with remarks which showed that he was in a good temper.

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  • He knew his stubborn will and straightforward hasty temper.

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  • We began disputing--Pierre and I--and I lost my temper.

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  • Hopefully find someone that could put up with his quicksilver mind and bad morning temper.

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  • Small boys love plunging red-hot iron into buckets of water to temper them.

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  • Plagiarism, womanizing, temper tantrums they 're all there.

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  • She was 18 years old and stunning, despite a few teenage temper tantrums !

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  • Someone else tried fifty-two years later but he could n't get up the side of the rock and left in a foul temper.

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  • My two-year-old son seems to have serious temper tantrums.

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  • A little white lie here, a little unnecessary temper flare there - our culture does n't see these as particularly bad things.

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  • Recognizing the potential of temper foam, Yost founded Dynamic Systems Inc. and worked with NASA to make a commercial form of the foam available for medical and sports equipment use.

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  • One of the most popular animal orthopedic products is a dog bed made of temper foam.

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  • Just remember to temper your bold design just a bit in case you aren't feeling so bold next time you redecorate your bathroom.

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  • Make sure to temper your selections or routine to be age- and humor-appropriate.

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  • One of the more profound effects of lack of sleep is what happens to a person's temper and mood.

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  • These women are very impatient and have a short temper if they have to wait in line or at the table.

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  • Goro's successor, Kintaro is another Shokan warrior with four arms and a horrible temper (but he has no direct relation to Goro).

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  • It can probably lay down for a couple of years to temper the tannins.

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  • Irritability, temper tantrums, and low self-esteem are common personality traits of children with CD.

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  • Children who get angry easily and lose their temper when things do not go their way can also have a hard time getting along with others.

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  • Time-out works well for children from 18 months up to five or six years of age and is particularly useful for temper tantrums, yelling, whining, and fighting.

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  • They should be prepared for behaviors that are problematic, such as temper tantrums.

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  • It usually occurs when the child is angry or frustrated and may be a component of a temper tantrum.

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  • Cyanotic BHS may be a component of a temper tantrum or a child's attempt to gain control over a situation.

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  • The earliest acting out behaviors are often referred to as temper tantrums.

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  • At that point, temper tantrums can be considered a normal part of growth and development.

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  • For toddlers, such violent outbursts of temper often include hitting, kicking, and biting others; and possibly self-injurious behaviors such as head-banging.

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  • Such temper tantrums usually peak between the ages of two and three.

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  • When no medical or psychological determination is discovered for acting out behaviors in young children above the age of four, the assumption can be made that the temper tantrums are a learned behavior.

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  • For toddlers, most childcare professionals recommend that parents make it obvious that temper tantrums are not an appropriate way to handle disappointment.

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  • Tantrums, also called temper tantrums, can occur by the age of 15 months, but are most frequent between the ages of two and four.

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  • Parents who are concerned about their ability to calmly deal with the child's temper tantrums may talk to the child's pediatrician about ways to cope more effectively with this natural part of the child's development.

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  • They can also regress to behaviors such as thumb sucking, bed wetting, temper tantrums, and clinging to a favorite blanket or toy.

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  • They may have temper tantrums over going to school or become depressed.

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  • Behavioral symptoms include temper tantrums, crying, angry outbursts, and threats to hurt themselves (self-mutilation).

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  • Toddlers' egocentric and demanding behavior, often marked by temper tantrums and negativism, has given this period a negative reputation.

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  • The child reacts to the parents' negative actions by increased aggressiveness, temper tantrums, or stubbornness.

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  • Children between two and four years of age show aggressive outbursts such as temper tantrums and hurting others or damaging toys and furniture because they are frustrated.

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  • Reported problems include obsessive/compulsive behaviors, depression, temper tantrums and violent outbursts, and tendencies to be argumentative, oppositional, rigid, manipulative, possessive, and stubborn.

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  • Don't try to rush this part of the process because if your chocolate gets too hot, it will lose temper and then you will have to go through a rather elaborate process to re-temper it.

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  • The reason we want the chocolate to keep temper is that tempered chocolate sets quickly without streaks of cocoa butter and is hard and shiny.

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  • You may find that you're crying over small things, feeling frightened or irritable, or losing your temper more than usual.

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  • You've seen your boyfriend or girlfriend lose his/her temper, maybe even get violent when he/she is mad.

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  • To temper that cost, couples may consider choosing simple wedding bands rather than elaborate designs, or using semi-precious gems instead of diamonds as focal points.

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  • The other side to this coin is that he tends to have a quick temper as well, and unfortunately, this can often lead to him saying hurtful things.

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  • Scorpio will have to be careful not to overwhelm his tender Virgo when his temper flares up, and Virgo will need to find the courage to remain calm when the man she loves becomes irrational.

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  • The Scorpio man will need to work to keep his temper and jealousy under control.

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  • Try not to lose your temper or make snappy remarks because, although he may be attracted to your physically, he'll make a mental note that you were unkind, and that may come back to haunt you.

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  • Relishing a challenge, their emotions are easily aroused, and they need to be careful when acting in haste because that legendary temper is sure to flare!

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  • This is especially true when faced with Scorpio's hot stinging temper when she feels she's been wronged.

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  • Some people of this sign take this to the extreme and make it impossible to live with them, while others temper their natural tendencies and grit their teeth when they find the cap off of the toothpaste or dirty dishes in the sink.

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  • While this can be true, a well-developed Leo has learned to temper the "all about me" syndrome.

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  • If she's wise, Leo won't ever try to blast Taurus with her fiery temper or strong arm him into doing things her way.

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  • Once he's done this enough times, he can learn to temper his expectations of his life mate and take a page out of Gemini or Aquarius's book of life to live and let live.

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  • Scorpio is renowned for his temper and sessions of deep brooding.

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  • The last key area you’ll want to address when it comes to keeping your Aries man is his temper.

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  • Aries has quite a temper that tends to be short lived, but explosive.

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  • This woman may find it quite difficult to talk about her feelings, particularly when she feels jealous, and it's in instances like these that you'll see that legendary temper erupt.

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  • You'd need to learn to control your temper so it doesn't govern your life and use it to your benefit instead.

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  • Toddlers and preschoolers are notorious for temper tantrums, ignoring the word "no" and whining or asking "Why?" on a regular basis.

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  • Autistic children often have great difficulty expressing themselves, frequently throwing temper tantrums instead of using speech.

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  • Permissive parents often feel as if they "have to" give in to avoid crying or a temper tantrum.

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  • In fact, when Luke Spencer approached young Laura Baldwin that night in his disco, he was a bad boy with mob ties, a bad temper and a drinking problem.

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  • Their behaviors may seem similar, and when they do have difficulties, they may manifest in ways that appear simply unruly or disruptive - nothing more than a temper tantrum.

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  • The fact is, while the behavior may seem similar to a simple temper tantrum, the underlying causes of that behavior is deep-seated and very much beyond either the parent or child's control.

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  • However, if they don't, keep in mind that being polite and acting in a reasonable manner will help you get the situation resolved much quicker than if you lose your temper.

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  • Bette Midler has a bit of a reputation for being a lady with a temper, but her long standing feud with Barry Manilow used to often get mentioned as one of the biggest bridges she had burned in her career.

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  • Hooters girl Francisca says she tries, but often fails to control her temper.

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  • She loses her temper at a tabloid reporter and storms out of the office.

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  • Greg - 15 year old Greg was noted for his bad temper and his skills as a PVC pipe layer and butcher.

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  • Over the course of the show, Greg was often shown losing his temper, punching windows and dragging one of the female contestants out of her sleeping bag and into the middle of the street.

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  • Regardless of his ill temper and bullying ways, Greg was dubbed a "hard worker" and the residents of Bonanza City developed a love-hate relationship with the teenager.

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  • Something about the stress of planning a wedding combined with lifelong dreams of the perfect nuptials turns these ladies into ravaging nightmares who scream, rant, and throw temper tantrums when things don't go their way.

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  • The show also focuses on Jeff's notorious temper and his own home life.

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  • She catches on relatively quickly but has a fiery temper that raises its head at all the wrong moments.

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  • He is portrayed as stubborn and gruff, with a quick temper and a penchant for neatness, but with a heart of gold.

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  • Paul Jr. worked as the shop's lead fabricator and designer for many years, but he has inherited his father's short temper and as a result, tension often runs high in the shop.

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  • The show features Gordon Ramsay, an exceptional chef with a fiery temper and penchant for curse words, as he searches for new head chefs for this restaurants.

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  • She has a reputation for a short temper and a fierce hatred of Cardassians, though she keeps her anger in check and always performs her duties.

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  • Lieutenant B'Elanna Torres (Roxanne Dawson) has a temper problem.

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  • She made it through several years in Starfleet Academy, but her temper finally got the best of her and she was disenrolled.

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  • Lt. B'Elanna Torres - Chief Engineer aboard the Voyager, Torres was a unique half-human, half-Klingon who tried hard to temper her Klingon passions.

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  • Who could blame Valorie for shrinking from Yancey's temper?

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  • She gave his teenage temper the benefit of the doubt and patted him on the shoulder as she left the car.

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  • The Watcher clenched his teeth, green eyes flaring with light and spinning before he regained his temper.

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  • He just has a hard time controlling his temper, and I don't pay him enough respect.

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  • Dean moved close enough to bump Fitzgerald but held his temper.

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  • Dean held his temper.

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  • Gabriel said nothing, sensing the half-demon's explosive temper was close to the surface.

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  • His love had a temper.

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  • He could feel himself getting redder as the man spoke, but for once, he held his temper.

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  • No, he'll just have to keep his temper in check for a while until he is used to it.

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  • She faced him coolly, trying to control her temper.

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  • Sackler, easily baited by DeLeo, was quick to show his temper.

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  • With every step toward the phone she told herself she shouldn't answer it – shouldn't lose her temper.

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  • His temper was free and running and she tried to do the same, but he caught her and threw her on the hay.

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  • He hasn't the temper for a woman yet.

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  • If he had Damian's temper, he'd be in trouble.

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  • Temper abandoned her then, leaving nothing but weakness and shame.

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  • I lost my temper.

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  • Her temper was shorter, the result of not sleeping and the pain of her arm.

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  • The Letters, which are very stilted, also reveal Apollinaris as a man of genial temper, fond of good living and of pleasure.

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  • In 1570 Presbyterian views found a distinguished exponent in Dr Thomas Cartwright at Cambridge; and the temper of parliament was shown by the act of 1571, for the reform of disorders in the Church, in which, while all mention of doctrine is omitted, the doctrinal articles alone being sanctioned, ordination without a bishop is implicitly recognized.

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  • No change was made in official methods, and the condition of affairs drifted from bad to worse, until the temper of the people, so long and so sorely tried, showed plainly that the situation had become insufferable.

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  • His temper quickly led him into quarrels with the minister of war, and he resigned his command in 1850.

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  • His marvellous physical and moral equilibrium gave him an evenness of temper which always renaered his society charming.

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  • What form it would ultimately take depended still on the balance between the forces of conservatism and change, the suspicious temper of the autocracy being revealed, during the years of unstable equilibrium, by the alternate concession and withdrawal of privileges, e.g.

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  • On the whole, the new Duma was fairly representative of the changed temper of the Russian people, disillusioned and weary of anarchy.

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  • Unhappily for himself and for Spain, he wanted the singleness of purpose required by a ruler who would devote himself to organization, and also the combination of firmness with temper needed for dealing with his nobles.

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  • Youatt says there is also a marked difference in the temper and habits of the two.

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  • Mastiffs are employed for fighting or as watchdogs, and for the most part are of uncertain temper and not high intelligence.

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  • Of Stevenson's daily avocations, and of the temper of his mind through these years of romantic exile, a clear idea may be obtained by the posthumous Vailima Letters, edited by Mr Sidney Colvin in 1895.

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  • The loyalty of the Prussian army remained inviolate; but the king was too tender-hearted to use military force against his "beloved Berliners," and when the victory of the populace was thus assured his impressionable temper yielded to the general enthusiasm.

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  • He had a hard head, a splendid constitution, tireless industry, a generally judicious temper.

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  • Neither could forgive Tisza for repudiating his earlier Radical policy, the so-called Bihar Programme (March 6, 1868), which went far beyond the Compromise in the direction of independence, and both attacked him with a violence which his unyielding temper, and the ruthless methods by which he always knew how to secure victory, tended ever to fan into fury.

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  • Had this attitude represented the temper of the whole Hungarian people, it would have been impossible for the crown to have coped with it.

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  • In this place his tact and temper, his dexterity and discrimination, enabled him to do good service, and he was rewarded with Walpole's friendship, a Garter and the place of lord high steward.

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  • At the risk no doubt of some defects of culture, the newer education cleared the way for a more positive temper, awoke a new sense of accuracy and of verification, and created a sceptical attitude towards all conventions, whether of argument or of practice.

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  • Among the drawbacks of this temper, which on the whole made for progress, was the rise of a school of excessive scepticism, which, forgetting the value of the accumulated stores of empiricism, despised those degrees of moral certainty that, in so complex a study and so tentative a practice as medicine, must be our portion for the present, and even for a long future, however great the triumphs of medicine may become.

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  • The father appears to have been somewhat peremptory in temper, but neither inhospitable nor tyrannical.

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  • It was not entirely a bed of roses, for the "respectable Emily's" temper was violent, and after a time she sought lovers who were not so much des cerebraux as Voltaire.

    2
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  • But Voltaire's restless temper was brewing up for another storm.

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  • It is doubtful whether his last and fatal visit to Paris was due to his own wish or to the instigation of his niece, Madame Denis; but this lady - a woman of disagreeable temper, especially to her inferiors - appears to have been rather hardly treated by Voltaire's earlier, and sometimes by his later, biographers.

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  • That neither this, nor any other, companion of Paul can have been the author of the whole work is supposed to follow both from its theological temper and from discrepancies between its statements and those of the Pauline Epistles on matters of fact.

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  • Jetha was of such a mild temper that, even if any one spoke harshly to him, he would endure it and never retaliate.

    2
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  • The fickleness of Philip and the jealous temper of Olympias led to a growing estrangement, which became complete when Philip married a new wife, Cleopatra, in 337.

    2
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  • Once arrived she gave herself heartily to Urban's cause, and wore her slender powers out in restraining his impatient temper, quieting the revolt of the people of Rome, and trying to win for Urban the support of Europe.

    2
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  • Mademoiselle de la Valliere held the position from 1662 to 1670; she was then ousted by Madame de Montespan, who had fiercely intrigued for it, and whose proud and ambitious temper offered a great contrast to her rival.

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  • Chardin, whose testimony is all the more valuable from the fact that he was contemporary with him, relates many stories characteristic of his temper and habits.

    1
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  • There, too, after a fit of temper, I went to find comfort and to hide my hot face in the cool leaves and grass.

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  • She was, alas, the helpless victim of my outbursts of temper and of affection, so that she became much the worse for wear.

    2
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  • During the whole trip I did not have one fit of temper, there were so many things to keep my mind and fingers busy.

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  • Whether he was in a bad temper because Prince Vasili was coming, or whether his being in a bad temper made him specially annoyed at Prince Vasili's visit, he was in a bad temper, and in the morning Tikhon had already advised the architect not to go to the prince with his report.

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  • During that year after his son's departure, Prince Nicholas Bolkonski's health and temper became much worse.

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  • That evening she expected several important personages who had to be made ashamed of their visits to the French theater and aroused to a patriotic temper.

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  • One matter connected with his management sometimes worried Nicholas, and that was his quick temper together with his old hussar habit of making free use of his fists.

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  • But Napoleon's power suppressed the ideas of the Revolution and the general temper of the age.

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  • Lashing out at them is a tongue-in-cheek reference to Campbell 's widely documented temper tantrums.

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  • I have noted this trifling circumstance only to point out how bad temper blinds its victims.

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    1
  • And Hester... well, Hester has an ungovernable temper, which betrays them all into terrible danger.

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    1
  • His temper flared, and the bellicose aspect of his personality became apparent.

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    1
  • The man was characterized by his abusiveness and quick temper.

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  • Temper tantrums are probably the most well-known behavior problems associated with toddlers.

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  • Remember to be patient and try to keep your temper in check.

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  • If you don't feel that you can speak about the problem without losing your temper, write a letter to them instead stating your intentions.

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  • The white will temper the red so that it doesn't feel overwhelming.

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  • Anger management seminars are excellent resources for anyone having trouble controlling their temper.

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  • Mayo Clinic- Offers information on controlling your temper.

    0
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  • Learning free anger management skills can be very helpful when you are caught in a situation where you feel as if you might lose your temper.

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  • Losing your temper at home, while not particularly desirable, may not be as bad as losing your temper at work or in public; the consequences of each can be disastrous.

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  • This process not only forces you to focus on what the other person is saying, but it also gives you a chance to get your temper under control.

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  • This will effectively give you a chance to sort out your thoughts while simultaneously reining in your temper.

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  • This can be an extremely beneficial course if you are a parent trying to find a better way to control your temper.

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  • If you're just about through with losing your temper and want to make some real changes in your life, then it's time to start learning anger management.

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    1
  • You might be more sensitive to things other people say or lose your temper more often, and you might be confused about the signals your body is sending you.

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  • My husband lost his temper and fired him on the spot for referring to me as, "the bride from hell," over the microphone.

    0
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  • At one point during his routine, a couple of guys started heckling him - causing Richards to lose his temper and spout off racist comments.

    0
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  • Beckham became known for his temper, especially during the 1998 World Cup in France, when he kicked a player in the back of the leg.

    0
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  • Over the years, Crowe, who was born in 1964 in Wellington, New Zealand, has gained a reputation for having a temper, including an altercation at a New York City hotel in 2005.

    0
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  • Campbell, 36, who has a reputation for having a temper and being difficult to work with, was also ordered to attend a two-day anger management course and pay more than $350 to cover Scolavino's medical costs from the incident.

    0
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  • Campbell is also known for her short temper, and has been accused several times of assault.

    0
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  • Alright, so Britney hasn't been the model daughter and maybe she did have a few temper tantrums and reportedly told her mom that she never wants to speak to her again.

    0
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  • If you've ever worked in a kitchen, you know all about chefs' tempers and if you've ever watched Hell's Kitchen or Kitchen Nightmares you know Chef Ramsay's temper is probably among the worst.

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  • Yost, named the foam temper foam because of its sensitivity to temperature change.

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  • However, temper foam was never used in space because it was not compatible with the space program needs.

    0
    1
  • A child over the age of two with daily spells may have learned that intense crying or a temper tantrum can trigger a spell.

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  • His father, Johann Reinhold Forster, a man of great scientific attainments but an intractable temper, was at that time pastor of the place; the family are said to have been of Scottish extraction.

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  • In his adoption of a purely defensive policy at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War, he miscalculated the temper of the Athenians, whose morale would have been better sustained by a greater show of activity.

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  • Cromwell's strategic manoeuvres, if less adroit than those of Turenne or Montecucculi, were, in accordance with his own genius and the temper of his army, directed always to forcing a decisive battle.

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  • This reveals the empiricist temper, and points to an attempted empiricist solution of great problems. Butler holds that more ambitious philosophies are valid, but he shrinks from their use.

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