[
US
/ˌtɛmpɝˈmɛnəɫi, ˌtɛmpɝˈmɛntəɫi, ˌtɛmpɹəˈmɛnəɫi, ˌtɛmpɹəˈmɛntəɫi/
]
[ UK /tˌɛmpɹəmˈɛntəli/ ]
[ UK /tˌɛmpɹəmˈɛntəli/ ]
ADVERB
-
by temperament
temperamentally suited to each other
How To Use temperamentally In A Sentence
- In fact I don't sec you as incompatible at all, temperamentally or otherwise - you've actually got a lot in common. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
- Breed dogs who are very sensitive to motion—who probably have an overabundance of rod photoreceptors in their retinae—and you may also get a dog whose acute sensitivity to motion leads to their being temperamentally high-strung. INSIDE OF A DOG
- Some heads were temperamentally and intellectually less inclined than others to perceive education in terms of grand statements and ringing slogans.
- He could be, and often was, called egotistical, self-centred, domineering and sneering; but at least one knew that the total effect was there because he meant it: he found it temperamentally impossible to be a creep. The Guardian World News
- He was probably unsuited to the intricate problems he faced, as temperamentally - and despite being purblind - he was a fighting general not a diplomat.
- He's got all the right qualifications but is temperamentally unsuitable.
- And if you put two or three people in one group who are all temperamentally incompatible, then I am pretty sure it would affect their performance.
- Unfortunately, Johnson was ill-suited ideologically and temperamentally for the demands of the job. Between War and Peace
- a job temperamentally unsympathetic to him
- But I've never felt the urge to convert anyone, feeling that everyone must clothe the formlessness of God in the form that best suits them, culturally and temperamentally.