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chicken-hearted
[ chik-uhn-hahr-tid ]
adjective
- timid; fearful; cowardly.
chicken-hearted
adjective
- easily frightened; cowardly
Derived Forms
- ˌchicken-ˈheartedly, adverb
- ˌchicken-ˈheartedness, noun
Other Words From
- chicken-hearted·ly adverb
- chicken-hearted·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of chicken-hearted1
Example Sentences
For the Dodgers to uninvite the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence from their Pride Night is chicken-hearted and shameful.
Kappe called Dasch "chicken-hearted," and said, "What kind of German are you? We Germans have one mission, which is to kill all the Jews."
"Now I have nothing to fear. And I am not a chicken-hearted type. I've become even more confident in myself. Had I been younger, I would have gone to the fighting with you," Oleksandr brags to some Ukrainian soldiers.
Joe Ruby, who helped invigorate Saturday morning children’s television as the co-creator of Scooby-Doo, the long-running animated franchise about a group of teenage private eyes and their chicken-hearted, snack-guzzling Great Dane, died Aug. 26 at his home in Westlake Village, Calif. He was 87.
All of this only makes Moran’s willingness to stand up for the separation of powers and for democratic values more commendable - and the calculus of his colleagues more chicken-hearted.
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