| 释义 | diffidentdif‧fi‧dent /ˈdɪfɪdənt/ adjective    diffidentOrigin:1400-1500 Latin present participle of diffidere  ‘to distrust’, from fidere  ‘to trust’ Her former classmates say she was shy and diffident in school.Joe was humble and diffident about his own success.Shaun became noticeably diffident when the conversation turned to the subject of his promotion.
 From being a painfully shy, diffident recluse, he suddenly metamorphosed into a garrulous and sometimes painfully overbearing extrovert.He seemed diffident, even shy.The Neanderthals seemed unexpectedly gentle and diffident people.The voice at the other end was light, gentle, diffident.
not confident about talking to people► shy not confident about talking to people, especially people you do not know: · David was always rather quiet and shy at school.· Carrie looked up at him and gave him a shy smile.painfully shy (=extremely shy): · He was painfully shy in public, but completely different at home with his family.too shy to do something: · I was too shy to ask her out on a date.go all shy spoken (=suddenly become very shy): · Look, she's gone all shy - stop teasing her.shy with girls/boys/adults etc (=shy when you are talking to girls, boys etc): · Because little Danny spent all his time with his mother, he was rather shy with men.► timid  frightened to talk to people or to give your opinion, because you have very little confidence: · Ralph's wife was a small, timid woman who hardly ever spoke.· "May I come in?" said a timid little voice.► bashful  someone who is bashful  is unwilling to give their opinions or do something that they would enjoy, especially because they are embarrassed or afraid that they will look stupid: · Don't be bashful about telling your family how you feel.· Kirsty gave Willy a bashful grin.► coy  someone who is coy  deliberately behaves in a shy way because they think it is attractive: · Teresa blushed when she saw me and turned very coy.· Her mother encouraged her to use her feminine charm, to be coy and alluring.► diffident  formal someone who is diffident  does not like talking about their achievements or is not confident of their abilities: · Shaun became noticeably diffident when the conversation turned to the subject of his promotion.diffident about: · Joe was humble and diffident about his own success. ► diffident manner/smile/voice etcshy and not wanting to make people notice you or talk about youdiffident manner/smile/voice etcdiffident about  He was diffident about his own success.—diffidently adverb—diffidence noun [uncountable] |