Antonyms for bashfulness


Grammar : Noun
Spell : bash-fuhl
Phonetic Transcription : ˈbæʃ fəl


Definition of bashfulness

Origin :
  • 1540s, from baishen "to be filled with consternation or dismay" (mid-14c.), from Old French baissier "bring down, humiliate" (see abash). Related: Bashfully; bashfulness (1530s).
  • noun modesty
Example sentences :
  • I could grow eloquent over my gifts, if it were not that my bashfulness might embarrass me.
  • Extract from : « Tony Butler » by Charles James Lever
  • Barrington was the most diffident of men; his bashfulness amounted to actual pain.
  • Extract from : « Barrington » by Charles James Lever
  • The attitude of warding off reveals itself as fastidiousness and as bashfulness.
  • Extract from : « Erasmus and the Age of Reformation » by Johan Huizinga
  • Stendhal says that our two most patent vices are bashfulness and cant.
  • Extract from : « Joyous Gard » by Arthur Christopher Benson
  • Let the inscription on my tombstone be—'Died of Bashfulness.'
  • Extract from : « The Blunders of a Bashful Man » by Metta Victoria Fuller Victor
  • Then said little May, who did not know what bashfulness was, 'I wish I might go and see him, too.
  • Extract from : « Chatterbox, 1906 » by Various
  • Now, bashfulness is almost always a sure sign of amour-propre.
  • Extract from : « The Silver Lining » by John Roussel
  • Nigel, not being troubled by bashfulness, quickly followed his guide.
  • Extract from : « Villegagnon » by W.H.G. Kingston
  • Some do this from mere bashfulness, but Felicia showed no bashfulness in any other way.
  • Extract from : « A Forgotten Hero » by Emily Sarah Holt
  • It seemed to Carrie he was as yet only overcoming the last traces of the bashfulness of youth.
  • Extract from : « Sister Carrie » by Theodore Dreiser

Synonyms for bashfulness

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019