Temporâlis, & hoc temporâle, pen. prod. Quint. That whiche dureth til a certaine time.Exilium temporale. Hermogenianus. Ingenium temporale. Curt. An vnconstant and chaungeable wit.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
tempŏrālis, e, adj. [tempus]. I. In gen., of or belonging to time, lasting but for a time, temporary, temporal (mostly postAug.): causa, Sen. Q. N. 7, 23, 1: laudes, Tac. Agr. 46: pa/qos temporale esse, Quint. 6, 2, 10: concessio, Dig. 29, 1, 1: exsilium, ib. 47, 10, 95: ARAE, erected for the occasion, Inscr. ap. Marin. Fratr. Arv. 43, 16; opp. perpetuum, Lact. 2, 8, 68; 7, 4, 12.—B. In partic., in gram.: temporale verbum,
denoting time
, Varr. L. L. 9, 108 Müll.: nomen (as annus, mensis), Prisc. p. 581 P.: adverbia (e.g. pridem, nunc, modo), id. p. 1017 ib.—II.Of or belonging to the temples of the head: venae,
the temporal veins
, Veg. Vet. 2, 11; 2, 16.—Adv.: tempŏrālĭter, for a time, temporarily: observata lex, Tert. adv. Jud. 2 med.