The singer's compelling, pensive and introverted lyrics were delivered with an unusual diffidence from a band enjoying their level of success. |
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His gentleness, diffidence, enthusiasm, his sense of fun, his quietly mocking spirit enslaved everyone. |
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It is with diffidence and humility that I greet the ultimate constitutional power in the Republic, the Presidential electors. |
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So I think with some reluctance, with some diffidence, I come down on the positive side of the question. |
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Was the miners' apparent diffidence at the event motivated by political considerations? |
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He is paid to be serious, but his default mode is loose and playful, with a touch of hipster diffidence. |
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Another shortcoming of the book is Atkinson's diffidence in examining the role of an airmobile division, the Army's only one. |
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Perhaps we need a trade union of the self-effacing, an Oscar for tentativeness and diffidence. |
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Other children sometimes mis-interpret your little Virgo's shyness as diffidence or stand-offishness. |
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And yet, as Mattia and Alice grow older, goodhearted men and women fall for them, drawn by their diffidence. |
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The development of sovereign funds revives protectionism and creates a feeling of diffidence vis-à-vis such funds. |
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Present migration policies have only increased irregularity, trafficking, marginalization, social tension, diffidence and racism. |
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He treated his peers among the grand ayatollahs with diffidence and contempt at best, and intimidated or placed them under house arrest at worst. |
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The Commission is similarly grappling with this politically correct diffidence. |
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At the beginning there was a bit of diffidence, but now they have understood that this course of study will allow them to find work quickly. |
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This diffidence about deciding how to handle minimum wages is not shared by other governments. |
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The committee is disappointed by the diffidence of the Committee of Experts. |
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The activity started off with some individual races, but because of shyness and diffidence it was not successful. |
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After the initial period of diffidence and hesitation, the young ones got along quite well with one another, and became totally absorbed in the proceedings. |
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And it hurts when we have this clumsy, plodding exchanges because he was my best friend, and now we can't seem to talk to each other without diffidence and discomfort. |
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Matthew, like your co-star Hugh Grant in this movie, possesses a kind of debonair diffidence. |
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But when they open the back door of each van, and peer into the sardine-packed interior, they are met by decades of accumulated mistrust, suspicion, diffidence and fear. |
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Palin, whose gentle curiosity places him more in the tradition of the late American broadcaster Studs Terkel, approaches people with unfeigned empathy and two other, seemingly incompatible, qualities: diffidence and courage. |
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His only desire was for a political system in which he could do the only job that he felt truly qualified to do. But events brushed such diffidence aside. |
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Yet he may fail nonetheless, in part because of the regrettable diffidence of his European peers, but mainly because of how toxic his past grandstanding has made him in their eyes. |
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And even if its GDP overtakes America's by the end of the decade, China will remain as poor as Brazil or Poland are today, by one estimate. Hubris may be less of a danger than its opposite, a kind of economic diffidence. |
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But the army's diffidence is increasingly being taken as evidence that, despite Mr Musharraf's protestations to the contrary, Pakistan never abandoned its policy of harbouring terrorists at home and sponsoring them abroad. |
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The cinema: from diffidence to acceptance. |
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Where specimens have appeared to me to be new, I have ventured, although with extreme diffidence, to nomenclate them. |
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It is, fundamentally, to approach each man and woman as a brother or sister, changing our diffidence into confidence, competition into collaboration, hostility into hospitality. |
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And though it is true that her son and Mr Singh's expected successor, Rahul, speaks sparingly in public, this is probably as much due to his diffidence as to the far-sighted inscrutability that Mr French sees in him. |
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I got along swimmingly. The travelling men, after a moment or two of embarrassed diffidence, treated me quite as one of themselves. |
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Where that possibility is strong, programme designers would need to check whether special approaches might be needed to attract the really non-literate and to overcome the factors that cause their diffidence about enrolling. |
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I have the same diffidence in my feelings that most public speakers have, and am apt to think that others can speak better and more edifying than I can. |
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