English to Latin Meaning of diffident - diffidens


Diffident :
diffidens

increduli fuerunt, infidele, dubitat, generatio incredula, qui increduli, diffidens, suspectum, timidis, armaverat, et pigriores, nolebant, minus, timeret, fugax

diffidensdiffidenter
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Definitions of diffident in English
Adjective(1) showing modest reserve(2) lacking self-confidence
Examples of diffident in English
(1) For those who are rather diffident about facing a public examination, there are helpful ÔÇÿproxy writersÔÇÖ available.(2) After reading her views on the debate, it makes me wish I had something weighty or political to say, but I'm a little diffident about the whole thing.(3) Far from being arrogant, today's doctors are diffident and afflicted by insecurity and self-doubt.(4) With diffident reluctance, she rose from her seat and went to where her outer robe hung; a wooden peg set in the near wall.(5) Dating agencies were once sniggered at as the last resort of those too diffident , dull or undesirable to find a partner in the normal course of their social life.(6) He made sure that his furniture received the maximum publicity at international fairs, although he came across as a surprisingly diffident and modest man.(7) I am blaming the fact it's St George's day for my refusal to complain - what could be more English than feeling too diffident to complain about receiving an awful haircut?(8) With no one to listen to them, they get trapped in their problems and grow up diffident and unsure of their abilities.(9) And his diffident manner should not be mistaken for a lack of energy.(10) A champion of women's education in the truly liberal sense, he helped many a shy diffident young woman face the academic world.(11) Ironic, too, that he's diffident to the point of sheepishness, even in front of the most adoring audience.(12) The tenor in these passages is definitive and assertive, quite at odds with the unassuming, almost diffident , tone of the rest of the book.(13) Far from being diffident , gratulatory or admiring, patients may bubble with entitlement, seethe with rage and insist on constant approval.(14) Thirty years later he is still embarrassed or diffident every time he is confronted with even a simple practical task.(15) Emotionally diffident , he lacks the physical and dramatic force to invest the role with heroism.(16) She is neither diffident nor boastful about this fact.
(1) differentiate between ::
alia aliorum
Synonyms
Adjective
1. shy ::
fugax
2. bashful ::
verecundus
3. modest ::
verecundus
4. self-effacing ::
auto-obliterans,
5. unassuming ::
proborum, demissorum
6. meek ::
mites
7. unconfident ::
unconfident
8. unassertive ::
unassertive
9. timid ::
timidis
10. timorous ::
timidis
11. humble ::
humilem
13. reticent ::
reticere
14. hesitant ::
incertus
15. insecure ::
insecure
16. self-doubting ::
se haesitaret,
17. doubtful ::
dubium
18. uncertain ::
incertum
19. unsure ::
incerta
20. self-conscious ::
VERECUNDES
21. mousy ::
mousy
Antonyms
1. immodest ::
argumentum impudicitiae habenda
2. outgoing ::
exitus
Different Forms
diffident, diffidently
English to Latin Dictionary: diffident

Meaning and definitions of diffident, translation in Latin language for diffident with similar and opposite words. Also find spoken pronunciation of diffident in Latin and in English language.

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