phlegmatic
English
WOTD – 17 July 2007
Alternative forms
- phlegmatick
- phlegmaticke
- phlegmatique
Etymology
From Old French fleumatique. See phlegm.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /flɛɡˈmætɪk/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ætɪk
Adjective
phlegmatic (comparative more phlegmatic, superlative most phlegmatic)
- Not easily excited to action or passion; calm; sluggish.
- 2013, A.O. Scott, “How It Looks to Think: Watch Her,” Rev. of Hannah Arendt, dir. by Margarethe von Trotta, New York Times 29 May 2013: C1. Print.
- Their friendship (immortalized in a splendid volume of letters that has clearly served as one of Ms. von Trotta's sources) is a fascinating study in cultural and temperamental contrast, an impulsive and witty American paired with a steady, phlegmatic German.
- (archaic) Abounding in phlegm.
- phlegmatic humors
- a phlegmatic constitution
- Generating, causing, or full of phlegm.
- Sir Thomas Browne
- cold and phlegmatic habitations
- Sir Thomas Browne
- Watery (clarification of this definition is needed).
Synonyms
- (calm and reasonable, tending not to get upset): apathetic, sluggish, cold-blooded, unflappable, stoic
Coordinate terms
Related terms
Translations
not easily excited to action
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abounding in phlegm
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generating, causing, or full of phlegm
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Translations
person
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