|
Definition of Emotional person
1. Noun. A person subject to strong states of emotion.
Specialized synonyms: Captive, Spitfire
Antonyms: Unemotional Person
Lexicographical Neighbors of Emotional Person
Literary usage of Emotional person
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Radiant Healing: The Many Paths to Personal Harmony and Planetary Wholeness by Bellamy Isabel, Isabel Bellamy, Donald MacLean, Maclean Donald (2005)
"A highly emotional person can have diminished will and reasoning power. ...
A) A highly emotional person could have an inflated L-field. ..."
2. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1907)
"So, when I find astigmatism, I find the emotional person. When \ find any marked
difficulties in one side of a bilateral sensory tract, the emotional ..."
3. Brightness and Dullness in Children by Herbert Hollingworth Woodrow (1919)
"No education can make a phlegmatic person emotional nor an emotional person
phlegmatic. The educational problem is to effect an association of the ..."
4. Psychology of Education by James Welton (1911)
"The emotional person is easily roused to fury, and in the first impulse of that
passion may take up some course of action with great vigour, ..."
5. The Social Welfare Forum: Official Proceedings [of The] Annual Meeting by Conference of Charities and Correction (U.S.), National Conference on Social Welfare, American Social Science Association, National Conference of Social Work (U.S.) (1895)
"If you speak to an emotional person of the sickness of a friend, it will instantly
affect the breathing, as any psychological action affects it. ..."
6. Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Correction, at the by National Conference of Charities and Correction (U.S.). Session (1895)
"If you speak to an emotional person of the sickness of a friend, it will instantly
affect the breathing, as any psychological action affects it. ..."
7. The Bookman (1897)
"This stout and emotional person was swaying backward and forward, and, in the
intervals of wailing and groaning called in Spanish upon several selected ..."
8. Introductory Education Psychology: A Book for Teachers in Training by Samuel Bower Sinclair, Frederick Tracy (1909)
"... CHAPTER X Sensibility In what respects does a very emotional person differ
from one who is not very emotional? Under the same conditions, ..."