Good-natured
[goo d-ney-cherd] /ˈgʊdˈneɪ tʃərd/
adjective
1.
having or showing a pleasant, kindly disposition; amiable:
a warm, good-natured person.
adjective
1.
of a tolerant and kindly disposition
adj.
1570s, from good (adj.) + nature. Good nature “pleasing or kind disposition” is from mid-15c. Related: Good-naturedly.
Read Also:
- Goodness
[goo d-nis] /ˈgʊd nɪs/ noun 1. the state or quality of being . 2. moral excellence; virtue. 3. kindly feeling; kindness; generosity. 4. excellence of quality: goodness of workmanship. 5. the part of anything; essence; strength. 6. a euphemism for God: Thank goodness! interjection 7. (used in expressions of surprise, alarm, etc.): Goodness, you gave […]
- Good-neighbor-policy
noun 1. a diplomatic policy of the U.S., first presented in 1933 by President Franklin Roosevelt, for the encouragement of friendly relations and mutual defense among the nations of the Western Hemisphere. A United States foreign policy doctrine, adopted by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933, designed to improve relations with Latin America. A reaction to […]
- Goodness gracious
Also, good gracious; gracious sakes. Exclamation of surprise, dismay, or alarm, as in Goodness gracious! You’ve forgotten your ticket. Both goodness and gracious originally alluded to the good (or grace) of God, but these colloquial expressions, which date from the 1700s, are not considered either vulgar or blasphemous.
- Goodness knows
see: god knows
- Goodness of god
a perfection of his character which he exercises towards his creatures according to their various circumstances and relations (Ps. 145:8, 9; 103:8; 1 John 4:8). Viewed generally, it is benevolence; as exercised with respect to the miseries of his creatures it is mercy, pity, compassion, and in the case of impenitent sinners, long-suffering patience; as […]