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[ UK /ˈɛkstɹəvˌɜːt/ ]
[ US /ˈɛkstɹəˌvɝt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. being concerned with the social and physical environment
NOUN
  1. (psychology) a person concerned more with practical realities than with inner thoughts and feelings

How To Use extrovert In A Sentence

  • This is a comparatively extrovert third album from the talented and technically advanced young Scots harper and pianist, now sojourning in Barcelona and soaking up even more musical influences.
  • Yeah, he's a pop genius, but his cool, affable swagger and clever repartee are the perfect complement to the more extroverted, outgoing personalities of Dahle and Ms. Case.
  • The times I was just having a beery laugh with my friends, times when we shared in each other's extrovert abandon, each other's dippy oblivion.
  • On the surface he was an optimistic extrovert, preaching freedom of conscience and religion; but underneath he was a brooding pessimist, with intransigent, darkly mystical views about the drama of human history and sexuality.
  • Aged 25 years above, mature, poised , good interpersonal skills, extrovert, strong in negotiation and persuasiveness.
  • Standing in front of a camera with that much flesh on show I suppose you've got to be pretty extrovert and confident.
  • Vakhtang Kodanashvili took a jazzier and more extroverted approach to the Piano Concerto in F, a too rarely heard wonder from 1926. Music review: the Post-Classical Ensemble's 'Russian Gershwin' evening
  • Still, we endure stoically, because the etiquette books - written, no doubt, by extroverts - regard declining to banter as rude and gaps in conversation as awkward.
  • Also, I don't think that it's safe to assume that extroverts have particularly effective social skills.
  • Unlike my sister, who became more reserved, I became an extrovert and very defensive.
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