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"coyness" Definitions
  1. the fact of being shy or of pretending to be shy and innocent, especially about love or sex, and sometimes in order to make people more interested in you
  2. the fact of being unwilling to give information about something, or answer questions that tell people too much about you synonym reticence

56 Sentences With "coyness"

How to use coyness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "coyness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "coyness". Mastering all the usages of "coyness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Some of this coyness stems from Wall Street's new arithmetic.
Her perfect face was turned from him in shyness, or in coyness.
This show of coyness and piety no doubt played well with his supporters.
His coyness was drawn out for several more confused exchanges before he finally broke.
As the first room of Hardcore reminds us, there's no need for such coyness.
The reason for the coyness lies precisely in the "broad implications" mentioned by Mrs Clinton.
And even to some of Trump's conservative critics, the writer's coyness only caused further panic.
His boyish coyness came out when he played ballads, which are arguably his most endearing songs.
The movie is marred by an unsatisfying resolution, which has a coyness better suited to literature.
With shy eyes that convey both coyness and pain, Mr Banderas reveals the sadness behind Mallo's flirtatious nature.
During the run-up to "Lover," Swift completely jettisoned her past political coyness, in ways both subtle and obvious.
No less pathological is the guilty coyness with which "King of Jazz" simultaneously acknowledges and effaces jazz's African-American origins.
That kind of filmmaking reserve or perhaps simply coyness is a stale tactic, one that too often gestures at nonexistent complexity.
Her nicknames, "Sassy" and "the Divine One," suggest the vast range of her musical personality, from playful coyness to diva hauteur.
On the aforementioned "Amor De Dios," she comes across better than her more seasoned counterpart, her coyness an asset in its execution.
Not that actual political parties are mentioned, part of an overall strategy of coyness when it comes to contentious real-world subjects.
Mr. Bezmozgis creates a disturbing portrait of a girl turned calculating and nihilistic by her upbringing, and there is no coyness here.
Bites There is no coyness to the ethos of Local, a modern new restaurant in Venice — it's right there in the English-language name.
It's coyness at its most millennial; we'll get naked for you, but opening up is like pulling teeth—slowly—and we like it that way.
When the paper attempted to get her to describe what Yara is up to in season 7, which premieres on July 16, she was all coyness.
Kasich, who has made it a point during the GOP race to not attack others, shed any coyness when suddenly in a battle of the elements.
Coyness is not held in high esteem in the birthplace of Free Body Culture—to the point that in many parks it's generally allowed to sunbathe naked.
In the ensuing outcry, Dmitri S. Peskov, Mr. Putin's spokesman, echoed his boss's coyness by noting that the president himself had not singled out any target by name.
One can contrast the coyness of those childhood scenes with the excitement generated by the ongoing storyline of a boy with a doll on the television show Queen Sugar.
And now the establishment is shocked to see a candidate who basically plays the same game, but without the coyness, the overwhelming front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. Why?
Judging from "Close to the Enemy," a new drama from the streaming service Acorn TV, an outbreak of coyness swept England in the difficult year after World War II ended.
There was a compulsory push for respectability, homogeneity, fear of everything, female coyness—you know—all the components for drowning in a sea of boredom, self-hate, and death of soul.
In this election, young Republican stars and seasoned party veterans alike have dispensed with any coyness to stress that they'd rather do yard work than stand beside the gaudy topiary that is Trump.
He can be discreet to the point of coyness (bodies sweat but don't necessarily grunt), but it is finally the insistent delicacy and depth of emotion that makes these characters so heart-skippingly tender.
Yet the movie is so perfectly acted and gorgeously filmed (the cinematographer is Julie Kirkwood) that we don't mind its coyness; the twanging notes of trepidation make us almost grateful for the leisurely build.
To hear her sing the words "pull up to my bumper baby, and drive it in between" without a shadow of coyness was bold as hell—it was promptly banned from most mainstream radio stations.
As a genre exercise, "Ma" offers some juicy, nasty kicks, but it also gestures — with maddening coyness — in the direction of the kind of socially aware allegory that made "Get Out" (and "Us") so fascinating.
The filmmakers feign boldness in tackling national politics, but revert to coyness and caricature when it comes to local matters, gesturing toward a multiculturalism that isn't even skin deep and sweeping gentrification under the rug.
Another one is Freedman himself: With no small British coyness, he quotes and praises a major doctrinal speech about military intervention by Tony Blair, burying in an endnote the fact that he helped the prime minister to write it.
However, where he views his coyness as an adoption of a progressive, non-binary stance on sexuality, it is actually a counteraction to that idea, as if he views gayness as the ultimate "other," a fabulous costume to be worn and fetishized.
In elections past, strivers in both parties deflected questions about the vice presidency with a coyness designed to make clear that, yes, they'd run a lawn mower over beloved relatives if those haplessly positioned kinfolk stood in the way of the assignment.
What Hynes is drawn to is the era's range of possibilities, the fluid futurism that no longer seems imaginable: the radical coyness of Prince, the classy sheen of British funk, the cosmopolitanism of early hip-hop and electro, the cool composure of Sade and Janet Jackson.
And while it continues the sequels' mounting sense of urgency, it also marks The First Purge as the first Purge film of the Trump era, when coyness has come to seem passé, messages can only resonate when sounded at the loudest possible volume, and the possibility of a norms-shattering totalitarian takeover is less of a matter of chin-stroking speculation than it once was.
Answering a voter's question, she said she had been reluctant to use the term genocide, because of its broad implications; but the latest evidence made it clear to her that IS's actions were "deliberately aimed at destroying not only the lives, but wiping out the existence of Christians and other religious minorities in the Middle East…" Why so much coyness, you might ask, over the use of a word?
The show is the work of Paolo Sorrentino, the acclaimed director of  the Oscar-winning Italian film The Great Beauty, and over and over it strikes the same two notes as that gorgeous, memorable and occasionally tiresome film: 1) an irreverent, even surreal absurdity that can be mesmerizing when it isn't undercutting itself by coyness (does the premiere really need to start with a dream sequence of Pius crawling out from beneath a mound of sleeping fetuses?); 2) a confidently chic minimalism that doesn't always resist the sin of ostentation.
"She invokes Jill's coyness, Lauryn's consciousness, and Erykah's poetic silliness in one hum." okayplayer.com Track Listing 1\. Moonlight Rendezvous 2\. A New Scenery 3\.
Afterwards, a prolonged period of mutual leg waving begins before copulation. For virgin females, male vibratory signals lead to females running towards the potential mate. However, mated females often “feign coyness” by waiting for males to approach before attacking them.
He knows that he can win people over. And he uses that, like children do, to get his own way. In this film, he has a very important mission that he has to accomplish and so he uses his personality, his coyness, and all of those things.
Evolved psychological adaptations (such as the ability to learn a language) interact with cultural inputs to produce specific behaviors (e.g., the specific language learned). Basic gender differences, such as greater eagerness for sex among men and greater coyness among women,Symons, D. (1979). The evolution of human sexuality.
Seri Rama: Imitates Rama shooting an arrow, searching for it and then retrieving it. This set is characterised by a straight back and confident movements in imitation of Rama's regal bearing. It is often recommended for improving the posture of students who are prone to hunching too much. Sita Dewi: Mimics Sita's coyness and femininity.
The speaker of the poem starts by addressing a woman who has been slow to respond to his romantic advances. In the first stanza he describes how he would pay court to her if he were to be unencumbered by the constraints of a normal lifespan. He could spend centuries admiring each part of her body and her resistance to his advances (i.e., coyness) would not discourage him.
Some critics believe the poem is an ironic statement on sexual seduction. They reject the idea that Marvell's poem carries a serious and solemn mood. Rather, the poem's opening lines—"Had we but world enough, and time/ This coyness, Lady, were no crime"—seems to suggest quite a whimsical tone of regret. In the second part of the poem, there is a sudden transition into imagery that involves graves, marble vaults and worms.
David Ansen of Newsweek declared, "There is one good reason to see First Love, and his name is William Katt ... he manages to radiate sweetness without being cloying, ingenuousness without coyness and sexuality without narcissism." However, Ansen added, director Darling "hasn't quite mastered the transition from TV to screen; everything is staged up front, every emotion hit squarely on the head, and the result is a certain monotony of tone."Ansen, David (November 14, 1977). "College Romance". Newsweek. 78.
Writing for The Independent, Jake Cudsi rated the album two out of five stars, opining that it "has its moments, but they are brief and virtually lost amid the more experimental forays". Laura Snapes of The Guardian also gave the album two out of five stars, judging that Morrissey plays the "victim" and is "often lost among the strident music as he hectors people afraid to be themselves", although his "coyness undermines his apparent glee as a truth- teller".
The dynamics of the hysterical personality have been described by Hollender in the following quote. > The mother's of (patient's with) hysterical personalities are depicted as > cold, preoccupied or detached, and their daughters complain of being > deprived of love...When children lose hope of obtaining emotional sustenance > they crave from their mothers they turn to their father's for it.Attractive > little girls soon find that coyness is effective in capturing and holding > their fathers' attention. Closeness is sustained "by a subtle mutual sexual > interest" (Hollender, 1971, p. 22).
Goddard, Peter, "Shadowy showman cuts an eerie album", The Toronto Star, April 28, 1978, page D3. Nevertheless, in a 1981 interview with the UK magazine Smash Hits, Nash was questioned about his real name, and replied with "Nashville Thebodiah Slasher". As a result of his coyness about his name, some fans came to believe that the Nash persona was an alter-ego of Ben Mink, who replaced him as FM's violinist in 1978. This is a common misconception, but he has been photographed onstage with Mink.
" Several critics applauded the song's opening refrain as "seductive," "memorable," and "hypnotic", with a particular review exclaiming "Janet makes it read like poetry." The analysis continued "realistically, no one had any reason to think she was sexy enough to pull it off. Where Janet used to hint at getting it in, she now openly admitted to wanting it without hesitation; "Go deeper baby, deeper...you feel so good I wanna cry." At 25, it made sense for her to give up the coyness of her earlier years.
The psychological distance between husband and wife appears to be reflected in the portraits where she gives the impression of self-absorption.Emotion, Color, Cézanne1 (The Portraits of Hortense) The tilt of her headan angle in portraiture more usually associated with depictions of saints. and body in this work, along with the look of submission and the downward-shaped mouth, are all indicative of an inward, self-concerned nature. Yet, the image is a tender representation of a coyness, shyness and sensitivity which art historian Meyer Schapiro believed to be a projection of Cézanne's own character.
Damon Knight wrote of the novel: > Parts of this book are relatively painless to read: the only irritants in > the dialogue are coyness, feminine overemphasis and an unaccountable > sprinkling of 1960 jive talk...What is objectionable in the book is its lack > of any internal discipline, either in the writing or the thinking. Under the > crisp surface it is soft and saccharine: wherever you bite it, custard > dribbles out. Is this the "woman's viewpoint"? I don't believe it; I think > it is the woman's-magazine viewpoint, from which God preserve us.
London said of this novel: "It is all sex from start to finish—in which no sexual adventure is actually achieved or comes within a million miles of being achieved, and in which, nevertheless, is all the guts of sex, coupled with strength." One reviewer disparaged the novel's "erotomania." Clarice Stasz further comments: : Little Lady upset readers in London's day for its gushing sexual imagery... [and] its close portrayal of the tempting pull of adultery. Modern critics, on the other hand, deride its Victorian coyness and sentimentality, its unrealistic characters.
According to Fisk News and Nashville Globe and Independent, the lawyers representing the students were: Z. Alexander Looby; Robert Lillard; Avon Williams; Coyness L. Ennix; A. J. Steel; J. F. McClellan; R. B. J. Campbell, Jr.; Adolph Birch; W. D. Hawkins, Jr.; Roscoe Hamby; William Blakemore; E. B. Lindsey; and Eugene White. Initially, the trial was presided over by City Judge Andrew J. Doyle. Doyle dismissed the loitering charges against the students and then stepped down from the bench, turning the trial over to Special City Judge John I. Harris. Despite strong support from the black community, all the students who had been arrested were convicted of disorderly conduct and fined $50.

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