Actors often have excitable temperaments. 演员通常有易激动的性情。
Khruschev was a very excitable and loud-mouthed person. 赫鲁晓夫是个感情容易冲动又爱叽里呱啦的人。
excitable
[ adj ]
easily excited
<adj.all>
capable of responding to stimuli
<adj.all>
Excitable \Ex*cit"a*ble\, a. [L. excitabilis inciting: cf. F. excitable.] Capable of being excited, or roused into action; susceptible of excitement; easily stirred up, or stimulated.
Lazarev accompanied efficiently enough and his account of the Second Symphony was similarly uncontroversial, if sometimes a little too obviously excitable.
A hot-tempered, excitable maverick, he jolted popular thought with his theories on crime, prisons and child abuse.
The trading tactic, in which millions of shares can be bought or sold in seconds, often is geared to make short-term gains in excitable markets.
A drug's potential hangs in the balance for many years. The behaviour of drug company's shares seems likely, if anything, to become more excitable over the medium term. Governments are keen to cut the cost of healthcare and want to reduce drug prices.
Come Tuesday, look for Ralph Cox on the second floor of the Spencer County Courthouse, screaming out a window to an excitable election-day crowd.
"He was more volatile, very excitable.
Not so long ago Mrs Virginia Bottomley, the health secretary, was tipped by her more excitable admirers as a future contender for the Tory leadership. Mrs Bottomley must have known it could not last.