How To Use Unadventurous In A Sentence

  • It's a gambit typical of the calculated, unadventurous craftwork that shapes the whole film. Times, Sunday Times
  • First, I don't consider myself an unadventurous eater. Oaxaca please.......hold the mole?
  • In reality, I'm just a unadventurous kinda girl.
  • Post the main course, we unadventurously order vanilla ice-cream with chocolate sauce for dessert.
  • We've been really unadventurous and painted it in exactly the same colours as the living room in Halifax was (Crown Period Colours), which we really liked.
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  • Extroverts tend to be more optimistic, positive, energetic and confident when compared with introverts, who are likely to be more passive, reserved, compliant, unassertive and unadventurous.
  • Even in the last couple of decades, Pamela has often been treated as an unadventurous or unappealing apprentice work - a stage that Richardson had to go through before he could get around to something worthwhile.
  • Holden was a willing player but rather unadventurous, while Sir Josiah proved imaginative but rash to a fault in his play! ANTI-ICE
  • At a certain point I determined that pretty much everything I was thinking about was pretty unadventurous and everyone knew it already so I kind of left my sketches and doodles aside and only fiddled with them when no one was looking.
  • Since then, his unadventurous diplomacy has led him to some roles unsuited to more outspoken figures.
  • Traditionally, the food industry has taken a rather unadventurous outlook, nurturing secrecy and marketing based on the classical avenues of flavour, price and predictability.
  • If he unadventurously chipped the ball back into the fairway, I thought, he could save a par.
  • The M8 ‘improvement’ project sums up the unadventurous government of low ambitions that is led by Jack McConnell.
  • Forget those conservative, unadventurous tags and think bohemian, diverse instead - after all, where else could you walk barefoot and feel totally at home?
  • In an era when life is lived at breakneck speed and anyone who's anyone is a cool, cosmopolitan coffee quaffer, the reliable, unadventurous, humble old cuppa ain't where it's at any longer.
  • And while the elements forming the core of the ten compositions presented here remain pretty straightforward and unadventurous, the process applied by Cichy and Pudlo gives this album its consistence and body.
  • If you strayed over to BBC Four on the night that the 2004 British Folk Awards were broadcast, you won't need reminding how utterly unadventurous our traditional music scene has become.
  • We had of course small classes, and I remember the standard of teaching as being unadventurously good.
  • Halibut with beurre blanc, from the list of plats du jour, may sound unadventurous, but there was nothing dull about it, especially since a subtle hint of fennel enhanced the dish without ever threatening to overpower it.
  • The rooms are unadventurously decorated in shades of pink, while the suites are decked out in peach.
  • His choreographic language is traditional and a little unadventurous but he has made a ballet which exudes self-confidence and fun.
  • We drink too much, we eat the wrong food, we are idle, we are unadventurous.
  • Why is it considered "unadventurous" not to drink one's wine from a baby bottle? Diner's Journal
  • Marsh, who joined in 1978, personifies the BBC's ‘serious’ side, with a reputation among staff as demanding if unadventurous.
  • He used dodgy restaurants to 'test' his dates and weed out the unadventurous eaters.
  • Even middle class is these days often used as a venomous synonym for smug, unadventurous or selfish.
  • These aren't bad things at all - it's the trite Italian-American menu unadventurous eaters adore.
  • The art collections were criticised for being unadventurous, and the building's basement, which has very little natural light, was ill - suited to its use as an exhibition space.
  • The new era is unintellectual, lacking in curiosity, unadventurous - an age without ideas.
  • But Denève appears to see this not as a depressing indictment of our unadventurous approach to music, more as ‘a cliché to be changed’.
  • Few, even among Dutch painters, led such an unadventurous life, yet in his dedication to his art, and the sacrifice of his well-being to his unremitted meticulous toil, he fell little short of the heroic.
  • Hairdresser Nicky Clarke says Kate Middleton's hair is 'unadventurous' Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Its attempt to comment on everything from politics to time travel, child abuse and mental illness makes most American films of the past year seem staid and unadventurous by comparison.
  • It makes the preoccupation of the contemporary humanities with modernity and its pathologies look easy and unadventurous. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Imagine England playing with a one-goal lead and 86 minutes of the clock to run down and you'll have some idea of how negatively and unadventurously they're being.
  • If Zadie came to a dinner party at my house she would probably conclude that I was some kind of white supremacist; or at least very, very boring and unadventurous.
  • Even middle class is these days often used as a venomous synonym for smug, unadventurous or selfish.
  • This book is short, easy to understand and thought provoking but rather unadventurous, drawing its raw material only from the established architectural canon.
  • At a certain point I determined that pretty much everything I was thinking about was pretty unadventurous and everyone knew it already so I kind of left my sketches and doodles aside and only fiddled with them when no one was looking.
  • Holden was a willing player but rather unadventurous, while Sir Josiah proved imaginative but rash to a fault in his play! ANTI-ICE

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