timidity

What we oppose is the government's negligence and timidity on this issue that has made our people, particularly Filipino workers, second class citizens in their own country,' she said.

But if Labour continue to go along with Brexit and insist on leaving the single market, the handmaiden of Brexit will have been the timidity of Labour."

<B Former Labour prime minister Tony Blair has criticised Labour's 'timidity' over opposing the government's approach to Brexit

The ex-PM warned the party's "timidity" over the issue would end up harming Britain.

I CONDEMN in the strongest possible words the timidity and cowardice shown by our government in facilitating the meeting of an Indian terrorist with his mother and wife on Pakistani soil.

Bush, in which the character would justify his own supposed timidity by muttering "wouldn't be prudent" to himself about every small risk.

Interpersonal sensitivity comprises five main components including interpersonal awareness, need for approval, separation anxiety, timidity, and fragile inner-self.

To understand this conundrum, the authors bring culture back to the forefront of explanation, while avoiding the theoretical errors of earlier culture-of-poverty approaches and the causal timidity and special pleading of more recent ones.

"One of the depressing things about TV light entertainment commissioning is its timidity. Need a new show, quiz or host?

The report said that England's timidity and negativity provides greater entertainment in the form of close-fought matches and England have paid Australia the great compliment of fearing them.

'The international fight against fraud and tax evasion represents a problem, which requires coordinated international solutions, requiring transparency - and timidity will not work,' advised the head of the Italian government (see separate article).

If Monday's attack was supposed to cause fear, timidity and division, it of course has failed utterly.

There was just too much timidity and we're trying to change that and get her a bit fitter."

They including Muhammad Hanif Panezai accompanied by Abdul Sattar Baloch, Fazila Sherdil and Shahnawaz Yousufzai said that corporal punishment was making school children suffering from psychological diseases such as fear, inferiority complex and timidity. We demand of the Balochistan government to legislate on corporal punishment issue besides making teachers at government and private schools and all settings bound not to physically punish school children, they said.

MUCH has been written about Carwyn Jones's competency as First Minister since May of this year, but nothing demonstrates his timidity and lack of ambition for Wales than his lecture to the Institute of Welsh Politics at Aberystwyth and reported in the Post, Nov 15, "Carwyn sets out Devo Limits", where he seems to be content to sit back and to pick up the crumbs left by Scotland's march to independence.