Your attitude to something is the way that you think and feel about it, especially when this shows in the way you behave. the general change in attitude towards handicapped people His attitude made me angry
If you refer to someone as a person with attitude, you mean that they have a striking and individual style of behaviour, especially a forceful or aggressive one. In psychology, a mental position with regard to a fact or state. Attitudes reflect a tendency to classify objects and events and to react to them with some consistency. Attitudes are not directly observable but rather are inferred from the objective, evaluative responses a person makes. Thus, investigators depend heavily on behavioral indicators of attitudes what people say, how they respond to questionnaires, or such physiological signs as changes in heart rate. Attitude research is employed by social psychologists, advertising professionals, and political scientists, among others
The position of a spacecraft as determined by the relationship between its axes and a reference plane
one of two basic personality postures: introversion, in which a person is mostly inner-directed, his libido proceeding from object to subject; and extraversion, outer-direct-edness Conscious introversion is compensated by unconscious extraversion and vice versa A person's attitude combines with her most differentiated function to produce a personality type Each of us alternates between the two attitudes but feels more comfortable in one
An individual's enduring evaluation, feelings and behavioural tendencies towards an object or activity p 125
position of aircraft or spacecraft relative to a frame of reference (the horizon or direction of motion)
An aircraft's position in relation to the horizon (i e , whether the aircraft is flying level, nose up, nose down, or banking left or right)
A learned predisposition, feeling, or conviction manifesting itself in a general state of readiness either to evaluate or to react toward an object or class of objects in either a favorable or unfavorable manner in a more or less consistent and characteristic way Attitudes are relatively stable and have three components: a cognitive or belief component, an affective or feeling component, and a connotative or action-disposition component Although behavior may be a function of attitude at times, attitudes are not necessarily predictors of behavior Consequently, changes in attitudes do not always result in changes in behavior