Advertisement
Advertisement
timorous
[ tim-er-uhs ]
adjective
- full of fear; fearful:
The noise made them timorous.
- subject to fear; timid.
- characterized by or indicating fear:
a timorous whisper.
timorous
/ ˈtɪmərəs /
adjective
- fearful or timid
- indicating fear or timidity
Derived Forms
- ˈtimorousness, noun
- ˈtimorously, adverb
Other Words From
- timor·ous·ly adverb
- timor·ous·ness noun
- over·timor·ous adjective
- over·timor·ous·ly adverb
- over·timor·ous·ness noun
- un·timor·ous adjective
- un·timor·ous·ly adverb
- un·timor·ous·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of timorous1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But even then, the right claimed that New Deal liberal traitors were subverting the fight against communism and that Dwight D. Eisenhower was too timorous to embark upon a real rollback strategy against communism.
Is that what these legislators and “timorous adults” are doing?
The court’s decision for the football coach should cause timorous adults, and the fragile young people they shape, to stop fueling today’s cancel culture and the demands for “safe spaces.”
An outwardly gentle soul, but with a spine of steel, Fred was never too timorous to lay bare our view on public affairs, including public corruption and injustices.
The first is the discovery by a timorous and eminently respectable architect of the nude body of a murdered man, neatly disposed in his bathtub, decorated with a pair of gold-rimmed pince-nez.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse