Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | English word PERSONABLE


PERSONABLE

Definitions of PERSONABLE

  1. (of a person) Having a pleasing appearance; attractive; handsome.
  2. (of a person) Having a pleasant manner; friendly; amiable.
  3. (legal, obsolete) Enabled to maintain pleas in court.

1

Number of letters

10

Is palindrome

No

21
AB
BL
BLE
ER
ERS
LE
NA
NAB
ON
ONA
PE
PER

4

2

7

AB
ABE

Examples of Using PERSONABLE in a Sentence

  • McMahon appeared on-screen for WWE from 1969 until 2022, initially as a personable play-by-play commentator.
  • Briscoe explained on his appointment of White as the 74th Texas Secretary of State: "When I began to consider candidates for secretary of state, I realized that it was crucial to appoint someone with legal training who shared my political views and who was loyal, energetic, and personable," Briscoe wrote in his memoirs.
  • Mary Ann becomes friends with other tenants of the building: the hippyish, bisexual Mona Ramsey; heterosexual lothario Brian Hawkins; the sinister and cagey roof tenant Norman Neal Williams; and Michael Tolliver, a sweet and personable gay man known to friends as Mouse (as in Mickey).
  • Throughout the 1970s, Lujan was re-elected and built a reputation as a low-key, personable backbencher.
  • He is big-hearted, with a free-spirited personality and is generally quite personable, though he tends to be overly competitive.
  • "It was a horrendous accident which took the life of a wonderfully charming, personable, handsome young man, who was a tremendous friend to both Helen and me," Stewart said.
  • At times the Eisenhowers can be personable; the President asks Lillian to sample his home-made soup and the First Lady throws a surprise birthday party for her, but most of the time the old guard of Lillian, Mercer, and Mays feel unnoticed and underappreciated.
  • The book's popularity is due to its personable style and content which most appeals to twentysomething and thirtysomething, post-modern Christians in the emerging church movement.
  • A personable "player's coach" and excellent motivator, Fontes was a key hire by Darryl Rogers, and would ultimately go on to coach Detroit for another seven seasons.
  • Michele Hernandez suggested there were basically two types of officers: a first group of personable, sharp, people-oriented go-getter types who were often recent college grads; a second group was somewhat out-of-touch "lifers" who often did not graduate from a highly selective college.
  • Seal stones were personable, as they distinguished Minoans from one another through their status, identity, religion, or record-keeping modes.
  • Despite the 2–7 docket in 1963, the beloved, personable Devore, affectionately known as "Hughie", boosted the morale of the squad that had been left devoid of emotion under Kuharich.
  • Through voice communication, vishing attacks can be personable and therefore more impactful than similar alternatives such as email.
  • SMART soon became the choice of younger Belizean professionals who felt uncomfortable dealing with the crusty, aristocratic BTL and wanted personable, attractive and efficient service with no headaches.
  • The recipient of this award is well-rounded, empathetic and personable, while demonstrating exemplary work ethic—all qualities that are valued by GCI teaching staff.
  • Add two personable young newcomers from Broadway, Tom Tryon and Elaine Stritch, whose brief portrait of a saloon hostess all but salvages the film.
  • Mary Ann befriends the other tenants of the building: hippyish, bisexual Mona Ramsey; heterosexual lothario Brian Hawkins; Michael Tolliver, a sweet and personable gay man known to friends as "Mouse"; and Norman Neal Williams, the tenant of the rooftop shed.
  • Priding himself on his personable relationships with the chain's employees, May wrote upwards of 25–50 notes a week congratulating employees on birthdays, promotions, new babies, and achievements.
  • Suggested coursework or extracurricular activities include those that enhance skills in public speaking and interpersonal communication, as funeral directors should be personable and skilled communicators in their work with grief-stricken clients.
  • A fixture on Los Angeles television for many years, Angelenos may remember Andrew as the personable weathercaster and environmental reporter for KHJ-TV (now KCAL-TV).



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