| cranky | | |
| adj. | 1. crank, cranky, tender, tippy | (used of boats) inclined to heel over easily under sail. |
| ~ boat | a small vessel for travel on water. |
| ~ unstable | lacking stability or fixity or firmness.; "unstable political conditions"; "the tower proved to be unstable in the high wind"; "an unstable world economy" |
| adj. | 2. cranky, fractious, irritable, nettlesome, peckish, peevish, pettish, petulant, scratchy, techy, testy, tetchy | easily irritated or annoyed.; "an incorrigibly fractious young man"; "not the least nettlesome of his countrymen" |
| ~ ill-natured | having an irritable and unpleasant disposition. |
| ill-tempered | | |
| adj. | 1. bad-tempered, crabbed, crabby, cross, fussy, grouchy, grumpy, ill-tempered | annoyed and irritable. |
| ~ ill-natured | having an irritable and unpleasant disposition. |
| moody | | |
| n. (person) | 1. helen newington wills, helen wills, helen wills moody, moody | United States tennis player who dominated women's tennis in the 1920s and 1930s (1905-1998). |
| ~ tennis player | an athlete who plays tennis. |
| n. (person) | 2. dwight lyman moody, moody | United States evangelist (1837-1899). |
| ~ evangelist, gospeler, gospeller, revivalist | a preacher of the Christian gospel. |
| adj. | 3. dark, dour, glowering, glum, moody, morose, saturnine, sour, sullen | showing a brooding ill humor.; "a dark scowl"; "the proverbially dour New England Puritan"; "a glum, hopeless shrug"; "he sat in moody silence"; "a morose and unsociable manner"; "a saturnine, almost misanthropic young genius"; "a sour temper"; "a sullen crowd" |
| ~ ill-natured | having an irritable and unpleasant disposition. |
| adj. | 4. moody, temperamental | subject to sharply varying moods.; "a temperamental opera singer" |
| ~ emotional | of more than usual emotion.; "his behavior was highly emotional" |
| temperamental | | |
| adj. (pertain) | 1. temperamental | relating to or caused by temperament.; "temperamental indifference to neatness"; "temperamental peculiarities" |
| adj. | 2. erratic, temperamental | likely to perform unpredictably.; "erratic winds are the bane of a sailor"; "a temperamental motor; sometimes it would start and sometimes it wouldn't"; "that beautiful but temperamental instrument the flute" |
| ~ undependable, unreliable | not worthy of reliance or trust.; "in the early 1950s computers were large and expensive and unreliable"; "an undependable assistant" |
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