Word
Of
The
Day
demeanor
demeanor \dih-MEE-ner\
noun
Demeanor refers to someone’s outward manner and behavior toward others.
// The teacher’s calm
demeanor put the classroom at ease.
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Examples:
“At home, your
demeanor impacts your family more than you realize. Your kids feed off your energy. If you’re engaged, positive, and present, they feel it.” — Brandon Brigman,
The Rockdale Citizen (Conyers, Georgia), 30 Mar. 2026
Did you know?
The history of
demeanor begins with a threat: the word has its roots in Latin
minārī, meaning “to threaten.” A form of that word was used in contexts having to do with driving animals—that is, impelling them to move—and from this word came more recent French ancestors having to do with leading, guiding, and behaving. By the 14th century, English had adopted a word out of this lineage: the verb
demean meaning “to conduct or behave (oneself) usually in a proper manner.” (Another
demean, defined as “to lower in character, status, or reputation,” entered the language later by way of the
mean that has to do with being cruel.) The noun
demeanor was formed in the following century through the addition of the suffix
-or.