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Meanings of more intemperate in English
We have no meanings for "more intemperate" in our records yet.
Usage of more intemperate in English
1
One of the moreintemperate articles was titled "The Indecent Decent Man."
2
The more urgent the required change, the moreintemperate is the vehemence of its promoters.
3
One, moreintemperate than the rest, urged an immediate attack on Thor and all his kind.
4
He had become moreintemperate than ever.
5
Darina Allen is likewise the right guide for temperate times, while Gordon Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares could only satisfy moreintemperate appetites.
6
Koop can take credit for subduing some of the Reagan Administration's moreintemperate impulses, including a proposal to institute nationwide mandatory AIDS testing.
7
On the succeeding Sundays the spirit of rebellion was breathed from the pulpit in language yet moreintemperate, and often profane and obscene.
8
Accordingly, each reformation was moreintemperate than the last, to be duly followed by a greater swing of the pendulum in the opposite direction.