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coward

Definition for coward

noun as in person who is scared, easily intimidated

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Example Sentences

Hill advised him not to, saying that if he did so, the cadets would regard him as a coward.

And cancer, deceiver, pretender, coward; it cannot even subsist without the vibrant people it depends on.

Or he could have been a coward, lashing out at me for some online slight.

He was ultimately a coward, and he took no pleasure in his victims fighting back.

Nina Straight says her half-brother was “a physical coward but not scared of death.”

A coward by nature, he had been on the verge of a nervous breakdown before the trial, thinking of what might happen.

I have not in the world the name of a coward, and yet I am the greatest coward here.

A grand victory all right, if that coward of a sheriff hadn't got the Governor to send the militia to Homestead.

He was thought brave, for no man in the Ozarks dared to stand up against him in a fight, but at heart he was a coward.

I had forgotten for the moment that the cop was a coward; but Burke didn't waste a bit of time in bringing back my memory.

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On this page you'll find 44 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to coward, such as: wimp, alarmist, baby, chicken, craven, and cur.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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