demeanor
(British demeanour)
/icons/point.icon BEARING, DEPORTMENT, DEMEANOR, MIEN, MANNER, CARRIAGE mean the outward manifestation of personality or attitude.
BEARING is the most general of these words but now usually implies characteristic posture.
e.g. a woman of regal bearing
DEPORTMENT suggests actions or behavior as formed by breeding or training.
e.g. your deportment was atrocious
DEMEANOR suggests one's attitude toward others as expressed in outward behavior.
e.g. the haughty demeanor of the headwaiter
MIEN is a literary term referring both to bearing and demeanor.
e.g. a mien of supreme self-satisfaction
MANNER implies characteristic or customary way of moving and gesturing and addressing others.
e.g. the imperious manner of a man used to giving orders
CARRIAGE applies chiefly to habitual posture in standing or walking.
e.g. the kind of carriage learned at boarding school
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noun
outward behavior or bearing:
⦅かたく⦆ ; 〖時にa ~〗 態度(manner); ふるまい(behavior)
e.g. a quiet, somber demeanor.
ORIGIN
late 15th century: from demean2, probably influenced by obsolete havour‘behavior’.