personality
noun /ˌpɜːsəˈnæləti/
/ˌpɜːrsəˈnæləti/
(plural personalities)
- His wife has a strong personality.
- My outgoing personality has definitely helped me succeed.
- He maintained order by sheer force of personality.
- normal human personality traits (= qualities), such as shyness
- Participants identified their own personality type and explored the implications.
- The characters' names reflect their personalities.
- There are likely to be tensions and personality clashes in any social group.
- People’s clothes are often an expression of their personality.
Extra Examples- Barbara has a very forceful personality.
- For the first time she was seeing the more unpleasant aspects of her husband's personality.
- From your personality profile, it seems you're interested in politics.
- He has achieved success by the sheer strength of his personality.
- His choice of clothes reflects his personality.
- She manages to project a very distinct personality.
- She stamped her personality on the company.
- The events of her early life shaped her personality.
- The job didn't really suit my personality.
- There was a personality clash between two members of the committee.
- a troubled man who had a vulnerable personality
- her amiable nature and easy-going personality
- personality conflicts between a faculty member and a student
- Her clothes reflect her lively personality.
- All candidates have to undergo a personality test.
- He developed a split personality after the crash (= began to suffer from split-personality disorder).
- The children all have very different personalities.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- bright
- bubbly
- extrovert
- …
- be
- have
- develop
- …
- type
- characteristic
- quirk
- …
- an aspect of somebody’s personality
- a side of somebody’s personality
- a clash of personalities
- …
- We need someone with lots of personality to head the project.
- She was very beautiful but seemed to lack personality.
Extra Examples- He had no screen presence and lacked any real personality.
- He has the presence and personality to hold audiences spellbound.
- She has brought out her husband's personality since their relationship began.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- bright
- bubbly
- extrovert
- …
- be
- have
- develop
- …
- type
- characteristic
- quirk
- …
- an aspect of somebody’s personality
- a side of somebody’s personality
- a clash of personalities
- …
- a well-known TV/radio/sports personality
- Various personalities from the world of music were invited.
Extra Examples- In a viewers' poll he was voted TV Personality of the Year.
- a broadcast network with well-known on-air personalities
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- famous
- great
- important
- …
- cult
- [countable] a person whose strong character attracts attention
- Their son is a real personality.
- [uncountable] the qualities of a place or thing that make it interesting and different synonym character
- The problem with many modern buildings is that they lack personality.
- Interesting displays can add personality to your store window.
Word Originlate Middle English (referring to the fact of being a person rather than an animal or thing): from Old French personalite, from medieval Latin personalitas, from Latin personalis ‘of a person’, from persona ‘actor's mask, character in a play’, later ‘human being’. Senses (1) and (2) date from the late 18th cent.