Home

Tempérés

Tempérés is the masculine plural past participle of the French verb tempérer, used as an adjective meaning tempered or moderated. It agrees with masculine plural nouns (des esprits tempérés, des climats tempérés), while the feminine plural form is tempérées (des opinions tempérées, des goûts tempérés). The term appears in everyday language and in literary or rhetorical contexts to denote balance, moderation, or restraint.

Etymology and scope: tempérer comes from Latin temperare, meaning to mix, blend, or moderate. In French, tempéré

Typical uses and examples:des esprits tempérés can describe people who reason with restraint; climats tempérés refer

Relation to related terms: tempérer is the verb form, meaning to temper or moderate. The noun form

and
its
inflected
forms
are
widely
used
to
describe
things
that
have
been
softened
or
leveled
from
extremes.
The
usage
is
common
across
domains
such
as
psychology,
politics,
aesthetics,
and
natural
history,
where
moderation
or
tempering
is
relevant.
to
temperate
climate
zones;
goûts
tempérés
denote
moderated
or
nuanced
tastes;
choix
tempérés
suggests
carefully
balanced
choices.
Because
gender
matters
in
French,
feminine
nouns
take
tempérées
(par
exemple,
opinions
tempérées,
goûts
tempérés).
tempérament
(temperament)
is
related
but
distinct,
often
used
in
psychology
or
music,
and
is
not
interchangeable
with
tempéré/tempérés
in
most
contexts.
In
meteorology
and
climatology,
the
standard
term
for
a
mild
climate
is
climat
tempéré,
often
pluralized
as
climats
tempérés
when
discussing
multiple
regions.