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Discover LudwigThe phrase "less moody" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is commonly used to describe someone's demeanor or temperament as being less prone to mood swings or moodiness. Example: "After starting therapy, Sarah became significantly less moody and more in control of her emotions."
Exact(12)
"It kills aggression, makes you less moody.
"First, he's got to be more accessible to the media and less moody," Dorfman said.
"He's a lot less moody or cranky or frustrated than the staff.
"Lluvia" is a more elaborate but no less moody ensemble work influenced by modern dance and dance theatre.
The building in the painting was real, but different, less moody — and you can't make a pilgrimage to it.
But for its allotted half-hour at Don Hill's, Allo Darlin' had been terrific, witty and heartfelt, like a less moody Belle & Sebastian.
Similar(48)
Kazin seemed familiar from his book-jacket photos--ranging from the moody buy accessible-seeming Kazin on the jacket of his seminal work "On Native Grounds" (published when he was twenty-seven) thethe more accessible and less moody-looking Kazin on his groundbreaking "New York Jew" (published twenty-six years later).
His less familiar, moody settings of translations of poems by the medieval Italian poet Folgore da San Gimignano are more harmonically imaginative.
Researchers have found, as expected, that people who score highly on such scales tend to be less confident, more moody and rattled by performance anxieties than those who score lower.
Imagine if blockbusters had taken a less mean-and-moody tack.
Nafy was moody, and less optimistic than Ismail.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com