It is shaped by our own temperaments and personalities that incline us to behave in certain ways, which, in turn, shape how others react to us. |
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But this is a temperament election, and neither of these people have temperaments that are frightening, and I think that's the key. |
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She was clearly one of those solitary temperaments whose earliest companions were things, whose inscapes spoke to her soul. |
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On the plus side, the temperaments and personalities of the 'firies' are starkly highlighted, as are current firefighting and rescue tactics. |
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The means toward attaining those goals, however, are as varied as our political views, socioeconomic background and individual temperaments. |
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Campers' temperaments vary, from easy to difficult, persistent to inattentive, outgoing to withdrawn. |
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She wrote at length on the four humours and on the temperaments of people according to the phase of the Moon in which they were conceived. |
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They must be able to adapt to the different artistic requirements and temperaments of classical, jazz and pop musicians. |
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Healthy human contact and a spacious, more natural living environment improves their temperaments tremendously. |
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The food goes off and Italian temperaments get extremely frazzled turning hotel rooms into makeshift kitchens. |
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Da Capo place the Second Symphony last on disc thus leaving Nielsen's refreshing thoughts on man's four temperaments as a thoughtful makeweight. |
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There, James claims sympathies with each of the opposed temperaments, opting for a decidedly melioristic middle position. |
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Their awkwardness, overextended maturity, mercurial temperaments, and easy companionship were all spot on. |
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While the sprites that run the weather here are capricious, their temperaments are contained within some very strict limits. |
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In addition, staff personalities and temperaments could have impacted parental knowledge gain. |
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With so many artistic temperaments involved, it was surprising that the festivals remained so free of cultural clashes. |
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One's diet for example, can affect the body's temperaments and thus influence ones's intellectual moral character. |
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His design skills and my publishing experience helped balance our individual roles and temperaments. |
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It's learning, for example, to live in community with people of very different temperaments and talents and outlooks and personalities. |
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In Hinduism you have many deities with various temperaments and nature, so you have the luxury of choosing and bonding with the deity which suits your nature. |
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The temperaments of the child and the parents, particularly in the context of their sociocultural milieu, require flexibility. |
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For example, caregivers can be helped to avoid negative responses that might naturally be evoked by children with more difficult temperaments. |
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Relationship within the group was not easy, given the variety of origins, temperaments, mentalities, and the personal aspirations of each one. |
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Southerners and northerners speak different dialects, eat different food and even according to popular belief have different temperaments. |
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Some of these methods are still used today, particularly the concepts of balancing out the four elements, nine temperaments and four humours that make up the human body. |
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Back in the days of the four humors, people had no problem believing that temperaments emerged from the balance, or imbalance, of chemicals in the body. |
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The black students had volunteered to go to Central and were chosen from among other volunteers for their academic records and temperaments. |
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Meet the majestic horses and be charmed by their beauty and friendly temperaments. |
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Though of very different temperaments, they were close friends and often shared their experiments in writing with each other. |
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The two are very well suited notwithstanding their different temperaments and characters. |
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Some people do not realize the temperaments that they inherited from their parents and are hidden inside their chi, or life-energy. |
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Therapy included a discussion of complementary styles and temperaments. |
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Gypsies and travellers come to deal their trademark horses, piebald or skewbald cobs highly prized beasts said to have calm temperaments. |
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It reflects the temperaments of the mystic and the rationalist, the simple believer and the profound seeker after ultimate truth. |
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He classified the temperaments according to the predominance of the particular humors. |
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More judicious than Mr Lebrecht's tome, it outlines the often vexed relationship between creative temperaments and their commercial representatives who can be quite temperamental too. |
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So many different sensitivities come together, so many different temperaments bump against each other, perhaps more strongly there than elsewhere because no escaping is possible. |
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The embitterment of right-wing politics today isn't a patch on that of leftist temperaments in 1969 — an alienation so deep as to resemble indifference, but scintillant with rage. |
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But temperaments vary from person to person. |
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The second, suitable for extrovert temperaments, puts the emphasis on evangelising and on changing society in order to prepare it in readiness to receive the kingship of Christ. |
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All the created entities interact in various permutations and combinations to produce different temperaments like the peaceful, the aggressive, the imbecile and the intelligent temperaments. |
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Is the fact that Mr Bush sat silently in hour-long meetings with his treasury secretary, while Mr O'Neill prattled on, a sign of ignorance or of tolerance Arguably, Mr O'Neill's strictures reflect a clash of temperaments. |
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It was a correspondence, from first to last, of an unusual intensity. Although they were both New Englanders, their writerly temperaments were quite different. |
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Fitt and Devlin, coming from similar backgrounds and with similarly explosive temperaments, once had to be dragged out of a fist fight behind the Speaker's chair at Stormont. |
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There are few others in Kabul who would wager the same however, after taking into account the temperaments of Mr Karzai and the two candidates who are struggling to succeed him in the presidency. The alternative is horrific. |
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They are ascribed various and conflicting abilities, temperaments and appearances depending on the story and country of origin. |
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Scores of Estonians have spent time in Georgia, advising on everything from anti-corruption efforts to spy-catching. The temperaments could hardly be more different: Estonians are reserved, unhierarchical and efficient. |
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There is also remarkable variability in temperaments among babies of this age, with some being more or less attentive, welcoming to new things, and prone to distress, cheerfulness, or frustration. |
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As Caribbean residents, our two peoples have very similar temperaments. |
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A rich history of strong temperaments, old divisions and struggles such as those between the Montefeltro and Malatesta who contributed alla'arricchimento architectural and defensive. |
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However, the design of the system must also take into account animal behaviours, employee safety, group sizes, cattle breeds and temperaments if it is to be effective. |
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Some children, such as premature infants, ill infants and children, and infants and children with difficult temperaments, are particularly vulnerable to experiencing psychological abuse. |
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Keirsey and Bates also classify four subtype combinations as the four temperaments of Idealists, Rationals, Guardians, and Artisans. |
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They may have calmer temperaments than horses and also a high level of intelligence that may or may not be used to cooperate with human handlers. |
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A voice is really voices, a gathering of dictions and attitudes that coexist, not always harmoniously, like multiple personalities, or perhaps temperaments or humors. |
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