temperish

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English

Etymology

From temper +‎ -ish.

Adjective

temperish (comparative more temperish, superlative most temperish)

  1. Peevish; cross.
    • 1931, Jennie Grace Walker, Habits and Skills, page 137:
      If our reaction is temperish, Great Britain gets it five minutes after she sends her message.
    • 2016, Caroline Shenton, Mr Barry's War:
      The day Barry left, Pugin made a temperish comment in his diary: 'The present condition of the architecture is deplorable. Truth reduced to the position of an interesting but rare and curious relic.'
    • 2017, Robert Edmond Alter, Shovel Nose and the Gator Grabbers:
      As a general rule he had five simple emotion gears: he was either hungry, sleepy, curious, frightened, or temperish .
  2. Having a bad-tempered disposition; moody or volatile.
    • 1898, John B. Small, The Human Heart Illustrated by Nine Figures of the Heart:
      It is discerned that a child is temperish, or so inclined; the intention, of course, is to avert the current of this coming tide.
    • 1931, Dorothy Leigh Sayers, The Five Red Herrings:
      His whole person was noticeable, too – the wide, ridgy shoulders, tumbling fair hair and queer, light eyes, temperish, pouted mouth and heavy jaw.
    • 1931, Lucy Maud Montgomery, A Tangled Web:
      Emilia Trask had money but she had a temperish look.

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