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The phrase "a little timid when" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who is somewhat shy or hesitant in specific situations or contexts.
Example: "She can be a little timid when speaking in front of large groups."
Alternatives: "somewhat shy when" or "a bit hesitant when".
Exact(2)
"You can be a little timid when you speak.
"I was a little timid when I first started playing football, and if it wasn't for the support and encouragment of Coach Lyons I might not have become the player I did.
Similar(58)
"If injuries are on your mind, they're probably going to happen, because you're playing a little timid, and that's when bad things happen," he said.
"A little timid and nervous.
"I was a little timid about accepting," Ms. Smith said.
She saw him lingering there, just a little timid, for what seemed like an hour.
Compared to Uthopia, a haughty dark-brown stallion, she looked a little timid.
Having moved many times, being an only child and being dyslexic, I was more than a little timid and insecure.
"I find myself acting a little timid, protecting myself, so the world out there won't hurt you," Deonarain said.
She just seems a little muted, a little timid, a little too afraid of her own mouth to embark on those wild little hidings-to-nothing that made her so fun to watch in the past.
It's a little timid, and maybe too 'nice.' " Adam Jonas, a Morgan Stanley automotive analyst, and some of his colleagues saw the new MKZ at the auto show this week.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com