What's the difference between extroverted and likeable?

Extroverted


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) How do you tell the difference between a Finnish introvert and a Finnish extrovert?
  • (2) For all Rossi's extroverted stage image, he has a reputation for avoiding most offstage drama – parties, for example.
  • (3) Condition 3 subjects were less extrovert (socially oriented) than the other subjects.
  • (4) The influence of personality (types A-B and extrovert-introvert) was also studied.
  • (5) Andrew is an extrovert, a cheerful lovely soul, a cheeky guy,” says Morrissey.
  • (6) --I. Introverts (FPI-E) performed selfexaminations with only half the frequency of extroverts (p less than 0,01).
  • (7) The extroverted and rapid treatment has implied that the geriatric department has become much more significant in the hospital.
  • (8) We assess the hierarchical relations between traits differing in breadth, using a task in which subjects select the most meaningful of two statements, such as "To be talkative is a way of being extroverted" versus "To be extroverted is a way of being talkative."
  • (9) The volunteers were more extrovert (P less than 0.001), more flexible (P less than 0.001), more tolerant or less impulsive (P less than 0.001), had more self-confidence and initiative (P less than 0.001), and were more satisfied and optimistic (P less than 0.01) when compared with the general norm.
  • (10) In general myopes exhibited a personality pattern of introversion, whereas hypermetropes maintained a pattern described as extroverted.
  • (11) It is not so much, then, a fact--correcting Jung, for instance--that we are to be dichotomized into extroverts and introverts, but rather that we all begin by aspiring toward human communion and affection and friendship but that, unfortunately, many of us fail; we who fail are the frustrated extroverts, the retreating introverts; if we cannot enjoy the company of others and command from them the recognition we (abnormally) feel for ourselves, well, then we shall cultivate our own company.
  • (12) Jones sometimes gives the impression that he profoundly regrets having to relinquish his hard-won anonymity, but Styler insists he can be quite an extrovert.
  • (13) The results of the Cattell Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire showed that the smokers were significantly more extroverted and self-reliant than the non-smokers.5.
  • (14) These results are consistent with some previous studies showing a positive relationship between EEG alpha activity and extroverted personality traits.
  • (15) There is a significant differences in power of the frontal areas between extrovert and introvert subjects.
  • (16) (a) 3 subjects who on the personality tests were identified as introverted, reserved, and trusting preferred to work in the machine-paced condition, while 9 subjects who were identified as extroverted, outgoing and suspicious preferred the self-paced condition, (b) the performance errors in machine-paced operation were 372% higher than for self-paced work, and (c) there were no differences between machine-paced and self-paced work on physiological variables, except for sinus arrhythmia for the task with high perceptual load, and quantity of production.
  • (17) Which is possibly why we "onlies" have such a bad rep. We're either spoilt brash extroverts or loner introverts, selfish to the core.
  • (18) Such extroverted symptoms as behavioral problems and loss of temper were significantly more frequent in patients assigned to the latent organic class, whereas symptoms of phobia and depressive mood were more often present in patients belonging to the nonorganic class.
  • (19) In the first, pig oocytes were fertilized in vitro immediately after collection (immature oocytes) or after being cultured for 44 hr with cumulus cells connected to the whole wall of the extroverted follicle (follicle oocytes) or without cumulus cells (denuded oocytes) (Mattioli et al.
  • (20) The superiority of recall for introverts was replicated, and a reminiscence effect was found for the extroverts.

Likeable


Definition:

  • (a.) See Likable.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A ceremony will take place at which Jolie will receive the child, who is said to be healthy, likeable, a bit shy and keen on football.
  • (2) "It is not a likeable work," ran one unfavourable review, "containing little humour or tenderness or modesty.
  • (3) Denis Napthine, a former country vet, is like your favourite uncle – a bit of a dag but highly likeable.
  • (4) Sex differences in the perception of touching were investigated by having 25 male and 25 female college students rate how likeable a touch would be under different conditions.
  • (5) And trust and likeability come from being honest, not always from being nice.
  • (6) And that is not easy.” Clinton faced questions about her “likeability” during her failed campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008.
  • (7) , G2, 21 March), a likeable person with whom I once shared a public platform.
  • (8) No wonder David Cameron wanted to have at his side the man who so successfully enhances his likeability .
  • (9) You might dislike the prime minister's policies – and that's fine – but he and the chancellor are two very likeable and good men, as well as politicians that care deeply about others, and their colleagues know it.
  • (10) "It's all past history as far as the group is concerned," comforts their instantly likeable manager Joe Moss as we wait in a west London recording studio for the Smiths' imminent return from a Thameside photo session.
  • (11) But the need for likeable heroes may instead ensure that the Bushes and Obamas will take the blame – leaving Ronald Reagan up there with George Washington, founding hero of the republic, and with Abraham Lincoln, its saviour.
  • (12) Female characters in books, movies and on TV are meant to be likeable and, as nymag.com points out this week, if they're not, the problem is usually explained away as a medical problem (such as Homeland's Carrie being bipolar.)
  • (13) Three homogeneous and stable factors emerged from a factor analyss: Aggression, Withdrawal and Likeability.
  • (14) If there was a fear before this Olympics began that it would be a corporatised, soulless event, the effort and enthusiasm of the volunteers have filled it with a likeably amateur and properly human warmth.
  • (15) I liked it.” In private Defour is likeable, though he can find privacy difficult.
  • (16) But they also may be tackling broader concerns about the party’s likeability, after the party spent most of this week on the wrong side of public opinion over issues such as the non-domicile tax status .
  • (17) But while the radical increase of women in the workforce has shifted views, we're still not living in a society that sees women and men as equally competent, likeable and authoritative.
  • (18) As we know, this manifesto for women in the boardroom tells us that the correlation between women being judged 'likeable' and their position in a hierarchy are inversely proportionate.
  • (19) This led directly to Briers working with Branagh on many subsequent projects: as a perhaps too likeable Malvolio ("My best part, and I know it," he said) in an otherwise wintry Twelfth Night at the Riverside Studios, Hammersmith, in 1987, and on a world tour with the Renaissance company as a ropey King Lear (the set really was a mass of ropes, the production dubbed "String Lear") and a sagacious, though not riotously funny, Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • (20) I am not so very old, but I'm old enough to have noticed that the times in my life when I was most admired by men, the times when I was considered most likeable, were also the times when I was most vulnerable, most powerless and unsure of myself.

Words possibly related to "extroverted"

Words possibly related to "likeable"