diffident
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++dif·fi·dent /ˈdɪfɪdənt/ adjective SHYshy and not wanting to make people notice you or talk about you 胆怯的,羞怯的diffident manner/smile/voice etc 羞怯的举止/微笑/声音等diffident about He was diffident about his own success. 他对自己的成功很谦卑。 —diffidently adverb —diffidence noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
diffident• The voice at the other end was light, gentle, diffident.• Joe was humble and diffident about his own success.• He seemed diffident, even shy.• Her former classmates say she was shy and diffident in school.• The Neanderthals seemed unexpectedly gentle and diffident people.• From being a painfully shy, diffident recluse, he suddenly metamorphosed into a garrulous and sometimes painfully overbearing extrovert.• Shaun became noticeably diffident when the conversation turned to the subject of his promotion.diffident manner/smile/voice etc• Despite a shy and diffident manner, Davison was a hard-working and gifted teacher of endless patience.Origin diffident (1400-1500) Latin present participle of diffidere “to distrust”, from fidere “to trust”dif·fi·dent adjectiveChineseSyllable
Corpus to notice people make and not wanting shy
diffident
dif‧fi‧dent /ˈdɪfədənt, ˈdɪfɪdənt/
adjective
diffident manner/smile/voice etc
diffident about
He was diffident about his own success.
—diffidently adverb
—diffidence noun [uncountable]
dif‧fi‧dent /ˈdɪfədənt, ˈdɪfɪdənt/
adjective Date: 1400-1500
Language: Latin
Origin: present participle of diffidere 'to distrust', from fidere 'to trust'
shy and not wanting to make people notice you or talk about youLanguage: Latin
Origin: present participle of diffidere 'to distrust', from fidere 'to trust'
diffident manner/smile/voice etc
diffident about
—diffidently adverb
—diffidence noun [uncountable]