peripatetic. Or, maybe you just like being a peripatetic, a walking wanderer. Peri- is the Greek word for "around," and peripatetic is an adjective that describes someone who likes to walk or travel around. Peripatetic is also a noun for a person who travels from one place to another or moves around a lot.
(of a face) wrinkled or furrowed, as by experience or the endurance of hardship. roughly irregular, heavy, or hard in outline or form; craggy: Lincoln's rugged features.
a person devoted to outdoor sports and recreational activities, as hiking, hunting, fishing, or camping. a person who spends much time in the outdoors.
In fact, indoorsy isn't even a word. (The spell checker on my computer is losing its electronic mind every time I dare to type it.) The closest word to "indoorsy" is probably "homebody" or "hermit" or "weirdo."
Nature enthusiast
Outdoors enthusiast. Enthusiast: someone who is very interested in and involved with a particular subject or activity: a computer-games enthusiast. (Cambridge Dictionary) Motivation for my answer: the outdoorsman that was proposed does have a feminine version, outdoorswoman.What is an adjective? Adjectives are words that describe or modify other words, making your writing and speaking much more specific, and a whole lot more interesting. Words like small, blue, and sharp are descriptive, and they are all examples of adjectives.
Qualities that describe sports people.
- Drive – A strong desire to win.
- Focus – Someone having a concentrated attention.
- Discipline – A Code of conduct or behavior a sports person must follow.
- Dedication – The quality of being committed to a game or practice.
- Determination –
- Emotional maturity –
- Presence of mind –
- Competitiveness –
Antonyms: colorless, colourless, unfair, unjust, inactive. Synonyms: flashy, splashy, trashy, sporting, clean, meretricious, tacky, gimcrack, loud, garish, flamboyant, glossy, brassy, cheap, showy, tawdry, jazzy, flash, tatty, gaudy, sportsmanlike. sporty(adj)
Nemophilist is an obscure word that hasn't really been used for over 100 years – but it is a word that surely deserves a comeback! It means someone with a love or fondness for forests, woods, or woodland scenery, or someone who often visits them – a 'haunter' of woods.
Dendrophile. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Dendrophile may refer to: A person who loves trees, as in Dendrophilia (paraphilia)
a lover of the sea. The amount of time he spent on a boat, he considered himself a thalassophile.
A person who loves flowers is called “Anthophile”.
Dendrophile. A person who loves trees, as in Dendrophilia (paraphilia)
A lover of sunsets is called an 'opacarophile'. To understand its roots, the word opacarophile can be broken down into two parts: 'opacare' which is Latin for dusk or sunset, and 'phile' which is Greek for love.