Do we say diffidence or difference

diffidence 281 occurrences

Her reserve was really diffidence; her dreamy, expressionless gaze the result of a serious nature and a thoughtful temperament.

Only now and then a trembling, female, generally ancient, voice is heardyou cannot guess from what part of the meeting it proceedswith a low, buzzing, musical sound, laying out a few words which "she thought might suit the condition of some present," with a quaking diffidence, which leaves no possibility of supposing that any thing of female vanity was mixed up, where the tones were so full of tenderness, and a restraining modesty.

I bring forward the word, and the thing it represents, with diffidence, even apologetically: indeed, it is perhaps better to renounce the word altogether and substitute the term "beauty," for during the nineteenth century art got a bad name, not altogether undeservedly, and the disrepute lingers.

The following suggestions are offered with extreme diffidence, and only as uncertain and indeterminate approximations.

And he told me that he received my chiding letter and perceived that I suspected his reality in the business; but he was so hearty in it that I should see that he really meant as he spoke, concluding in these words, "You shall see it, and my practice shall reproach your diffidence" * * *.

She took no notice of the advertisement, not only as she could not be positive it related to herself, as also because she thought, if he were certain she had read it, he might resent her not answering it, as discovering a too great diffidence of his honour.

[t]These arts in vain our rugged natives try, Strain out, with fault'ring diffidence, a lie, And get a kick[H] for awkward flattery.

There, in soft hints, and in ambiguous phrase, With all the diffidence of long experience, That oft had practis'd fraud, and oft detected, The vet'ran courtier half reveal'd his project.

What passions reign among thy crew, Leontius? Does cheerless diffidence oppress their hearts?

A diffidence, perhaps too just, in my own qualifications will teach me to look with reverence to the examples of public virtue left by my illustrious predecessors, and with veneration to the lights that flow from the mind that founded and the mind that reformed our system.

The same diffidence induces me to hope for instruction and aid from the coordinate branches of the Government, and for the indulgence and support of my fellow-citizens generally.

As strict secrecy would of course be observed, the diffidence of many might be overcome.

Notwithstanding her great merits as an author, she had the extremest diffidence in her own abilities.

Called by an unexpected dispensation to its highest trust at a season of embarrassment and alarm, I entered upon its arduous duties with extreme diffidence.

It is certainly the greatest Honour we can do our Country, to distinguish Strangers of Merit who apply to us with Modesty and Diffidence, which generally accompanies Merit.

As this sudden Desertion of ones self shews a Diffidence, which is not displeasing, it implies at the same time the greatest Respect to an Audience that can be.

How long this sort of dumb love-making, or the pleasures of diffidence continued, we cannot tell.

Whenever we hastily judge, without hearkening to His voice, in diffidence of ourselves, we think and utter dreams full of extravagance.

he asked, his voice very gentle now, as if he understood something of the trouble and diffidence which lay behind.

A diffidence, natural in the circumstances, prevented him from narrating the story of his temptation to the magistrates next morning, and Mr. Higgs was equally reticent.

There was not a soul to hold speech with except the cook, and he was too busy to talk, even if he had not been afflicted with a painful degree of diffidence when she addressed him.

" She gently disengaged her hands, her chief sensation one of amusement, Abbey was in such an agony of blushing diffidence, all flustered at his own temerity.

A sense of her father's conscientiousness and of his true affection forbade her to criticise openly the principles on which he had directed her life; hence a habit of solitary meditation, which half fostered, yet half opposed, the gentle diffidence of Rose's character.

She was a typical English maiden, rather tall, shapely rather than graceful, her head generally bent, her movements always betraying the diffidence of solitary habit.

With some diffidence, from a sense of my own unfitness, I accompanied her, and conversed with the lady on the dawn and progress of a work of grace in the heart; lent her 'Fletcher's Address,' and after Mrs. C. and I had prayed, we parted.

difference 8647 occurrences

Not that it has made much difference.

I was forced to reduce our pace to a walk, but I was confident that it did not make much difference.

It makes a whole lot of difference just how fellows mean to go, when laying out the impedimenta for a trip.

" The voice, though very weak, sharpened perceptibly: "You, who are you?" "What difference does it make?if you need help.

She looked at him with new curiosity, wondering at herself, wondering at him that his presence or absence could make all this world of difference.

It makes no difference to me.

You'll see a difference in the trees since you were here before.

There's the greatest difference in Riverdale since this one was started.

"There's a difference between a mascot and a regular friend," I told him.

"Tell me how to tell the difference between a lie and the truth!"

"And Josie Greyyou see I've been studying the difference in the girls since I came home" Had he been studying her? "Is there so much difference?"

"And Josie Greyyou see I've been studying the difference in the girls since I came home" Had he been studying her? "Is there so much difference?"

The difference struck me.

It is not city or country that makes the difference, it is the homes and the schools and every educating influence.

I haven't shown you my penny buried in the lava of Mt. Vesuvius; I told my friend that savored of Pompeii, the only difference is one is above ground and the other underneath, but I couldn't persuade her to believe it.

" "Oh," cried Marjorie, drawing an astonished long breath, "what a difference it does make.

'The difference between us and the blind man is this:the blind man is unconvinced, because he cannot see; and we, because though we can see, we find that nothing can be shown.'

An authour of considerable eminence having engrossed a good share of the conversation in the company of Johnson, and having said nothing but what was trifling and insignificant; Johnson when he was gone, observed to us, 'It is wonderful what a difference there sometimes is between a man's powers of writing and of talking.

The only question was, as the nation was much in want of money, whether it would not be better to take a large price from a foreign State?' He entered upon a curious discussion of the difference between intuition and sagacity; one being immediate in its effect, the other requiring a circuitous process; one he observed was the eye of the mind, the other the nose of the mind[1038].

Sheep and goats agree together and differ from oxen in being usually of smaller size; the tail is shorter, the horns of females are much smaller than those of males, they lack the accessory column on the inner side of the upper molars, and the cannon bone is longer and more slender; but when it comes to a comparison of the one with the other, it is by no means always easy to tell the difference.

It is true that the early Greeks seem to have had a rough and ready rule under which mistakes were not easy, for Aristotle tells us "Alcmaeon is mistaken when he says that goats breathe through their ears," but the severely practical methods of our own day leave us little but some very minute points of difference.

The terms often employed to denote difference in the horns can have only a general application, for they break down in certain species in which the two groups approach each other.

What's the difference?

It makes not an iota of difference to muh.

It don't make no difference to me, one way or the other; but I can't have the two of you on my hands.

Do we say   diffidence   or  difference