Elan
Oh, dude, impetuous ardour is like when you're just all fired up and passionate about something without really thinking it through. It's like that moment when you're like, "Yeah, let's do this!" without considering the consequences. It's basically acting on impulse with a lot of enthusiasm.
The six-letter word you're looking for is "ardour." It refers to intense passion or enthusiasm, often forged through trials and hardships. In a broader sense, it can also imply the fervor and resilience developed through overcoming difficulties.
"Ardor" ("ardour" in the U.K.) means "great warmth of feeling; fervor; passion" or "intense devotion, eagerness, or enthusiasm; zeal" while impetuous means, "of, pertaining to, or characterized by sudden or rash action" (definitions from dictionary.com). So, impetuous ardor would be intense passion or devotion that is unrestrained or unchecked. It is having fervor, passion, and zeal, and acting impulsively or rashly on it, instead of trying to control it.
Ardour - software - was created on 2005-09-23.
The Latin noun calor can mean heat, warmth, passion, zeal, ardour or love.
"Desired" means "wanted". "Ardour" means "passion". "Moderate" means "not excessive", so "moderation" means "without excess". To "exceed" means to be more than. So, "I had wanted it with a passion that was more than an amount that was much more than it would be without excess." OK, so maybe that double negative is not what we want not to avoid. Let's say "I had wanted it with a passion which was very excessive." But the original sounds cooler.
His ardour for collecting modern art was well-known.
Coolness, indifference.
a another word for approach is attain, arrived by lee thorne
Ardour, adoration, devotion
You just used it!
Try Ardour for Linux.