hot-tempered

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of hot-tempered Robbie is a complicated man, at once incredibly compassionate and deeply self-centered, philosophical and brooding but also impulsive and hot-tempered. Erik Kain, Forbes.com, 17 Sep. 2025 Laura is observant, tender, strong-willed, hot-tempered. Matt Webb Mitovich, TVLine, 2 May 2025 Melissa Benoist as Bree Buckley: The intelligent and hot-tempered Buckley who formerly oversaw the fishery’s finances and, like her father, has allowed alcohol to ruin her bright future. Joe Otterson, Variety, 18 Sep. 2024 Benoist will play Bree Buckley, the intelligent and hot-tempered Buckley who formerly oversaw the fishery’s finances and, like her father, has allowed alcohol to ruin her bright future. Rosy Cordero, Deadline, 18 Sep. 2024 In a 2013 interview with CBS News, Knight pushed back on his reputation as being hot-tempered. Faris Tanyos, CBS News, 1 Nov. 2023 He is resented by Brother Nacho (Kinan Valdez), the most hot-tempered among them, for being another mouth to feed. Charles McNulty, Los Angeles Times, 26 Sep. 2023 In The Goldbergs, Orrantia plays Erica Goldberg, the sarcastic and hot-tempered sibling of show creator Adam F. Goldberg. Dallas News, 28 Feb. 2023
Recent Examples of Synonyms for hot-tempered
Adjective
  • There wasn’t any antagonistic issue or anything like that.
    Nick Harris, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 7 Oct. 2025
  • Now that the federal government has adopted an antagonistic stance toward vaccines, the business of immunization looks even worse.
    Katherine J. Wu, The Atlantic, 3 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • By this time, the eastern Roman empire, where Zosimus lived, had been fairly thoroughly Christianized, but Zosimus was a pagan hostile to Christianity.
    Literary Hub, Literary Hub, 10 Oct. 2025
  • The United States plans to upgrade its radars to improve their ability to identify hostile ballistic missiles targeting the homeland, according to a government announcement, as nuclear adversaries Russia, China and North Korea advance their missile capabilities.
    Ryan Chan, MSNBC Newsweek, 10 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • Last week, in trading for Kurtis MacDermid, the team acquired another feisty player who can handle some of the battles that Tkachuk would normally take on himself.
    Julian McKenzie, New York Times, 9 Oct. 2025
  • While the film is a sexy, frothy romp, on the one hand, the film also casts Doris Day as Babe, a feisty union steward.
    Kathy M. Newman, The Conversation, 8 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • Second, having quickly been identified by internet bloodhounds, the actual offending Polish paving magnate issued a belligerent non-apology.
    NEAL RUBIN, Freep.com, 10 Sep. 2025
  • Medvedev, a former president of Russia and an ally of incumbent President Vladimir Putin, has been known to make belligerent comments against the West, which have likely been approved by the Kremlin.
    Brendan Cole, MSNBC Newsweek, 6 Sep. 2025
Adjective
  • In that same Leeds-Bournemouth game, Tyler Adams — who was booed by the Leeds fans throughout — was his usual pugnacious self for 81 minutes.
    Henry Bushnell, New York Times, 29 Sep. 2025
  • Then Martinez, famously one of the commission’s most pugnacious members, decided to share a response.
    Douglas Hanks, Miami Herald, 15 Sep. 2025
Adjective
  • The Russian president struck an unusually combative tone, issuing stark warnings of potential retaliation over Western support for Ukraine and NATO expansion.
    Alia Shoaib, MSNBC Newsweek, 3 Oct. 2025
  • In a phone interview Thursday with Fox News Digital, Higby explained the group was sitting and having conversations with nearby protesters when a woman approached him and started being combative.
    Alexandra Koch, FOXNews.com, 3 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • All arms come from coal and steel and integrated industries would stop Europe’s most quarrelsome countries waging war on one another.
    Sara Stridsberg September 15, Literary Hub, 15 Sep. 2025
  • How did Marlowe find the space in his head, let alone in his days and nights, to compose his quarrelsome works, aiming them so squarely at the heavens and the gut?
    Anthony Lane, New Yorker, 8 Sep. 2025
Adjective
  • Corigliano’s symphony is assaultive in style and confrontational in intent.
    Alex Ross, New Yorker, 6 Oct. 2025
  • In August, Kelley was arrested and charged with three misdemeanors — one for electronic communications harassment and two for electronic disclosure of personal identifying information — following days of apparent confrontational social media posts allegedly doxxing her friends and family members.
    Julia Moore, PEOPLE, 30 Sep. 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Hot-tempered.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/hot-tempered. Accessed 13 Oct. 2025.

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