Proper noun
A surname.
A city within Buenos Aires, Argentina, named after George Temperley.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgI'll mix a lot of things. I'll wear a Temperley dress with flip flops, or I might be in head-to-toe Gucci and have on a ring that I got from a gumball machine for 50 cents. Sara Blakely
Jacobs, p. 135 However, another musicologist, Nicholas Temperley, writes, "The choral outburst 'Hail, Poetry' in The Pirates of Penzance would need very little alteration to turn it into a Mozart string quartet." Source: Internet
It had long served as inspiration for the designer’s printed, embellished, bohemian collections and Temperley was already dividing her time between London and Somerset. Source: Internet
The distinction between the two genres was the freedom to mould the musical form according to external programmatic requirements (Temperley 2001). Source: Internet
Jones (1998b), p. 177; Temperley (1980), p. 304. The mazurkas often show more folk features than many of his other works, sometimes including modal scales and harmonies and the use of drone basses. Source: Internet
See also: Temperley, History of the Paris Peace Conference, Vol VI, p505–506; League of Nations, The Mandates System (official publication of 1945); Hill, Mandates, Dependencies and Trusteeship, p133ff. Source: Internet