Difference between Temper and Season

What is the difference between Temper and Season?

Temper as a noun is a tendency to anger or lose patience easily. while Season as a noun is each of the four divisions of a year: spring, summer, autumn and winter.

Temper

Part of speech: noun

Definition: A tendency to anger or lose patience easily. State of mind. The heat treatment to which a metal or other material has been subjected; a material that has undergone a particular heat treatment.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To moderate or control. To heat-treat a material, particularly a metal. To mix clay, plaster or mortar with water to obtain the proper consistency

Example sentence: Have a heart that never hardens, and a temper that never tires, and a touch that never hurts.

Season

Part of speech: noun

Definition: Each of the four divisions of a year: spring, summer, autumn and winter.A part of a year when something particular happens: mating season, rainy season, football season.That which gives relish.the period over which a series of test matches are playedA group of episodes of a television or radio program broadcast in regular intervals with a long break between each group, usually with one year between the beginning of each.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To flavour food with spices, herbs or salt.To make fit for any use by time or habit; to habituate; to accustom; to inure; to ripen; to mature; as, to season one to a climate.Hence, to prepare by drying or hardening, or removal of natural juices; as, to season timber.To become mature; to grow fit for use; to become adapted to a climate.To become dry and hard, by the escape of the natural juices, or by being penetrated with other substance; as, timber seasons in the sun.

Example sentence: Silence at the proper season is wisdom, and better than any speech.

We hope you now know whether to use Temper or Season in your sentence.

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