timid - use in sentences

Adjective complement with noun phrase

  • make: Can early experience with humans make lambs less timid and stressed?

Modifies a noun

  • creature: They are timid creatures that spend most of their time on the ground.
  • soul: A more timid soul might throw in the towel in the face of all this crap.
  • cat: Never put a shy timid cat with an aggressive overbearing cat.
  • voice: GIRL: [ very timid high pitched voice ] Who is there?
  • reform: Venezuela shows that in its present state, the capitalist system cannot even allow the timid reforms Chavez wants to impose.
  • attempt: The Kyoto Protocol is a timid attempt to reduce the impact of climate change.

Modifying Another Word

  • too: Tories in recent years have become too timid about saying how we want to improve society.
  • rather: He knows he is by nature a rather timid young man.
  • naturally: Prior to that, in her naturally timid disposition, she might have felt at a disadvantage within the existing family relationships.
  • fairly: In the game's current state Race Driver 3 seems fairly timid across its expansive range.
  • quite: Pets can be brave or quite timid, just like us.
  • very: GIRL: [ very timid high pitched voice ] Who is there?

Used with adjective complement

  • seem: At the time, we remarked how the deer seemed even more timid than usual.
  • feel: I wonder how many of us here tonight are feeling timid about the work we've been called to?
  • become: Tories in recent years have become too timid about saying how we want to improve society.
  • look: Looking timid behind a huge guitar on a vast stage he mumbles his way through acoustic tracks across his four solo albums.
  • remain: They are largely unaccustomed to man and have remained fairly timid.

Preposition: in

  • face: The referees found themselves too timid in the face of hockey and Selwyn pressure.

Preposition: with

  • stranger: Her companion Jess is white and gray, 11 years old and just a little timid with strangers.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.