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Researchers have found risk-takers in one realm may be timid in others.
WSJ: What Makes a Risk-Taker
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The opposite approach is to be timid.
FORBES: Are You Bold?
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"Flirting allows you to meet someone you would ordinarily be too timid or terrified to approach, " she says.
CNN: Flirting 101: Coaches teach daters to cozy up
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He is unworried by their encounter believing it must be a timid creature.
BBC: 'Beast of Bodmin' sighted at Trewithen Gardens
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The big worry is that she may be too timid (see article).
ECONOMIST: Germany's election
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Many of its staff fear the new owner will be more timid.
ECONOMIST: Morocco and its king
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Simply put, it is not terribly good preparation for real life to teach students that they will be protected, by timid and risk-averse administrators, from hearing disturbing speech.
FORBES: Liability Reigns Supreme at the Corporate University
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Can Japan's timid consumers be convinced that all is well?
ECONOMIST: Just possibly, something to sing about at last | The
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Audiences read the posture as subservient, timid, unhappy to be there, and shy.
FORBES: Bill Gates and the Head Posture: Can You Get Away With It?
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Blair and Brown, characterised as reluctant Europeans too timid to make the case, may be more effective champions of Europe than they know.
BBC: Referendum St
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There is nothing to be gained--and fantastic opportunities to be lost--by the Administration's being timid.
FORBES: Fact and Comment
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Inside, guests were shuttled through various stations, treated to platters of dates, tiny cups of strong coffee, henna tattoos, dabs of essential oils like frankincense and sandalwood, and photos of themselves (to be posted online) posing in traditional Arabic garb along with a rather timid-looking falcon.
FORBES: Abu Dhabi Hits Times Square
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Belatedly, Mr Blair seems to acknowledge that he should be seen to make a principled stand over the treatment of these men, but he sounds too much like a timid supplicant.
ECONOMIST: Tony Blair needs a good row in Washington