The sunlight was very warm but my niece was too shy to sunbathe on the public beach.
He was so shy it was difficult to engage him in conversation.
I was once bucked off of a horse that was gun-shy, when a car back-fired.
The word "diffidently" is an adverb. An example of a sentence using the word would be: He diffidently explained why he had been late.
She was always a shy lady.He decided to shy away from the party.
The complete subject in the sentence is "some shy people." It includes the article ("some") and the adjective ("shy") that describe the people who are performing the action in the sentence.
"Some shy people" is the complete subject.
No, the word 'shy' is a verb (shy, shies, shying, shied) and an adjective (shy, shyer, shiest).Examples:Don't shy away form the difficult problems. (verb)The shy child peeked out from the doorway. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The shy child peeked out from the doorway. He had to see what way going on.The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'child' in the second sentence.
She coaxed her shy little sister out of her shell by encouraging her to join the school play.
It was in his nature to be shy. It was not from a factory, it was a product of nature. Nature prevented them from arriving on time.
no, it doesnt have a verb you can put 'am' between shy and i or you can put away between shy and a
In my English class, there are many shy students, who don't like to talk.
he has a shy smile