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wimpish

[ UK /wˈɪmpɪʃ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. weak and ineffectual

How To Use wimpish In A Sentence

  • Out of all the nations that make up the Union of Great Britain, England, at times, shows the most self-deprecating, wimpish and rudderless sense of national pride one could imagine.
  • Just cut out any new canes that appear to be too short, thin or wimpish to have any likelihood of bearing fruit and even if that leaves a dozen canes shooting from the ground, let them be to bear next year's fruit.
  • Chang alightweightas the wimpish Sun, and Taiwanese super - model Lin Chi - ling mostly decorative as Zhou's wife.
  • Allen was never a pretty picture, but his famous nebbish looks and wimpish physique did convey a certain elfish charm.
  • He may be absolutely mild-mannered (even meek and wimpish) in most respects, but no original thinker or doer gets anywhere in any field without aggression and stupendously high self-regard.
  • Dealing with a bully without becoming a thug yourself is not wimpish, negative passivity.
  • It's wimpishness, pure and simple. Times, Sunday Times
  • America did not gain its preeminent status in the global economy by putting its tail between its legs and wimpishly absquatulating into the cozy embrace of socialism every time a foreign competitor offered lower cost or greater quality.
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