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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
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Meyers-Briggs Personality Test
This is an actual psychological personality profile test that is put together with a site which matches up your personality type with a series of characters from well-known anime.
Anime Personality Test
After you take the test, go back to the first page you started at and click on the box that has your four-letter personality result.
Then post your results here.
I got ENTP.
Quote:
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Originally Posted by from the anime site
ENTP
Justy Tylor from Irrespomsible Captain Tylor, Diana from Sailor Moon, Utena from Revolutionary Girl Utena, Tom Servo from Mystery Science Theater 3000
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ENTPs are charming, outgoing, friendly people who make good first impressions and are good at getting other people excited about their ideas and projects. They are very perceptive and good at communication with people and noticing trends. ENTPs have very good negotiating skills and can convince anyone of anything. They have a need to please people and be liked, and are happy to be the focus of attention. ENTPs are good at telling stories and enjoy demonstrating their intelligence through their use of sophisticated language. They love bending rules to get what they want and enjoy getting away with things just because they can. ENTPs are very clever and observant , but procrastinate a lot so they may never show their true intelligence in school or other structured environments. They are at their best when improvising.
Their speech is filled with puns, jokes, plays-on-words and stories. They are the best of all the Thinkers at showing emotion, but it is hard to tell if they are faking it or not. In dress, ENTPs try to impress people, and will often surround themselves with as much luxury as they can afford. They have a reputation for being untrustworthy, which may come from their tendency to forget birthdays and planned gatherings.
Charismatic and flirtatious, ENTPs love challenges and being around people. They are aggressive and opportunistic and perform best when trying to win. ENTPs have short attention spans and leave many projects unfinished and goals unreached. They dislike people who try to control them and they hate hierarchies of power.
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by from the Meyers-Briggs site
"Clever" is the word that perhaps describes ENTPs best. The professor who juggles half a dozen ideas for research papers and grant proposals in his mind while giving a highly entertaining lecture on an abstruse subject is a classic example of the type. So is the stand-up comedian whose lampoons are not only funny, but incisively accurate.
ENTPs are usually verbally as well as cerebrally quick, and generally love to argue--both for its own sake, and to show off their often-impressive skills. They tend to have a perverse sense of humor as well, and enjoy playing devil's advocate. They sometimes confuse, even inadvertently hurt, those who don't understand or accept the concept of argument as a sport.
ENTPs are as innovative and ingenious at problem-solving as they are at verbal gymnastics; on occasion, however, they manage to outsmart themselves. This can take the form of getting found out at "sharp practice"--ENTPs have been known to cut corners without regard to the rules if it's expedient -- or simply in the collapse of an over-ambitious juggling act. Both at work and at home, ENTPs are very fond of "toys"--physical or intellectual, the more sophisticated the better. They tend to tire of these quickly, however, and move on to new ones.
ENTPs are basically optimists, but in spite of this (perhaps because of it?), they tend to become extremely petulant about small setbacks and inconveniences. (Major setbacks they tend to regard as challenges, and tackle with determin- ation.) ENTPs have little patience with those they consider wrongheaded or unintelligent, and show little restraint in demonstrating this. However, they do tend to be extremely genial, if not charming, when not being harassed by life in general.
In terms of their relationships with others, ENTPs are capable of bonding very closely and, initially, suddenly, with their loved ones. Some appear to be deceptively offhand with their nearest and dearest; others are so demonstrative that they succeed in shocking co-workers who've only seen their professional side. ENTPs are also good at acquiring friends who are as clever and entertaining as they are. Aside from those two areas, ENTPs tend to be oblivious of the rest of humanity, except as an audience -- good, bad, or potential.
Some Famous ENTPs:
Alexander the Great
Confederate General J. E. B. Stuart
Sir Walter Raleigh
Fictional:
Mercutio, from Romeo and Juliet
Horace Rumpole, from John Mortimer's Rumpole of the Bailey series
Dorothy L. Sayers's detective Lord Peter Wimsey
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Have fun!
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