Disposition /(?)/

Dis·po·si·tion

Disposition

n.
  1. The act of disposing, arranging, ordering, regulating, or transferring; application; disposal; as, the disposition of a man's property by will.
    Who have received the law by the disposition of angels.
    — Acts vii. 53.
    The disposition of the work, to put all things in a beautiful order and harmony, that the whole may be of a piece.
  2. The state or the manner of being disposed or arranged; distribution; arrangement; order; as, the disposition of the trees in an orchard; the disposition of the several parts of an edifice.
  3. Tendency to any action or state resulting from natural constitution; nature; quality; as, a disposition in plants to grow in a direction upward; a disposition in bodies to putrefaction.
  4. Conscious inclination; propension or propensity.
    How stands your disposition to be married?
  5. Natural or prevailing spirit, or temperament of mind, especially as shown in intercourse with one's fellow-men; temper of mind.
    His disposition led him to do things agreeable to his quality and condition wherein God had placed him.
    — Strype.
  6. Mood; humor.
    As I perchance hereafter shall think meet To put an antic disposition on.