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bad temper

NOUN
  1. a persisting angry mood

How To Use bad temper In A Sentence

  • The second period degenerated to bad tempered aggression with a referee reluctant to impose adequate discipline.
  • It was an encounter which began to turn the public against Judith, who appeared on the defensive, uncontrolled, bad tempered and all in all a rather unsympathetic character.
  • Why join in unnecessary bad temper and fuss? Times, Sunday Times
  • But when this self-involvement is threatened, well, then we see how irascible, irritable and bad tempered stoners can be.
  • That would certainly put it in a bad temper and might explain why it was always so scary.
  • At the same time, his bad temper and lustfulness make him a mirror of his master, and this makes the mistaken identities of Act Two (and Leporello's eventual repentance) all the more realistic.
  • Dolly took full advantage of the outrageous disruption to vent her bad temper and to express her extreme displeasure in all directions.
  • Those bad tempered personnel manning counters in the revenue offices will no longer be the bane of citizens' existence.
  • It's only a little mark, but its misuse arouses more bad temper among purists than any other punctuation.
  • I put his bad temper down to having had an unhappy childhood.
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