choler
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Middle English coler (“yellow bile”), from Old French colere (“bile, anger”), from Latin cholera (“bilious disease”), from Ancient Greek χολή (kholḗ, “bile”). Doublet of cholera.
Pronunciation
    
- enPR: kǒ'lər
- Rhymes: -əʊlə(ɹ)
Noun
    
choler (usually uncountable, plural cholers)
- Anger or irritability.
- c. 1587–1588, [Christopher Marlowe], Tamburlaine the Great. […] The First Part […], 2nd edition, part 1, London: […] [R. Robinson for] Richard Iones, […], published 1592, →OCLC; reprinted as Tamburlaine the Great (A Scolar Press Facsimile), Menston, Yorkshire, London: Scolar Press, 1973, →ISBN, Act III, scene ii:- Threatned with frowning wrath and iealouſie,
 Surpriz’d with feare and hideous reuenge,
 I ſtand agaſt: but moſt aſtonied
 To ſee his choller ſhut in ſecrete thoughtes,
 And wrapt in ſilence of his angry ſoule.
 
- 1808, Richard Graves, The Spiritual Quixote, page 127:- This roused the tinker's choler, already provoked at Tugwell's amorous freedom with his doxy, and he gave him a click in the mazard. Tugwell had not been used tamely to receive a kick or a cuff; he, therefore, gave the tinker a rejoinder, […]
 
 
- One of the four humours of ancient physiology, also known as yellow bile.
Translations
    
anger
one of the four humours
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