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    Gharial Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Gharial? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Gharial from Animals and what is the personality traits.

    Gharial
    ISTP

    ISTP (8w9)

    Gharial personality type is ISTP, which means that I am what I think, I am what I feel, and I am what I do. If I have the intention to do something, it will happen. The most important thing here is my intention.

    I am very sharp and I can read people very easily. I am very good at listening, and I can sense what a person needs to hear.

    I tend to focus on my needs rather than other people’s needs. I respect everyone’s needs, but I do not focus on anyone’s needs except my own. My life is my own and my needs have to come first.

    I am very sensitive to other people’s feelings and can easily pick up on other people’s emotions.

    I am a very honest person, and I keep my promises without fail. I am a very straight person, and I like to speak the truth.

    I tend to be very stubborn and often stick to my decisions till the end. However, since I am a very open-minded person, I can change my mind if the situation demands.

    I am a very cheerful person and love to joke around.

    The gharial, also known as the gavial or the fish-eating crocodile, is a crocodilian in the family Gavialidae and among the longest of all living crocodilians. Mature females are 2.6–4.5 m long, and males 3–6 m. Adult males have a distinct boss at the end of the snout, which resembles an earthenware pot known as a ghara, hence the name "gharial". The gharial is well adapted to catching fish because of its long, thin snout and 110 sharp, interlocking teeth. The gharial probably evolved in the northern Indian subcontinent. Fossil gharial remains were excavated in Pliocene deposits in the Sivalik Hills and the Narmada River valley. It currently inhabits rivers in the plains of the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. It is the most thoroughly aquatic crocodilian, and leaves the water only for basking and building nests on moist sandbanks. Adults mate at the end of the cold season. Females congregate in spring to dig nests, in which they lay 20–95 eggs.

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