Shy

    by | December 30, 2014

    Super Synonym Sets for Stories

    The different ways that the word shy is used can be categorized into three themes: anxious, suspicious, and deficient. Shy is primarily used as an adjective to describe how someone is feeling or looking. When shy is used as a verb, its meaning relates to movement; however, the cause of the movement is linked to a feeling of anxiety or suspicion.

    Students may encounter each of these themes within the texts they read. Although being shy is often thought of as a negative trait, students may encounter an unconventional hero who uses their shyness as a strength by developing their observational skills. Or maybe students will read a text about a rabbit who shied away from a garden patch because a farmer was harvesting crops.

    Follow-Up

    • How is being distrustful different than feeling anxious?

    • Have you ever felt shy in a large group of people? How did you feel?

    • How might being shy be a strength and not a weakness?

    The Spanish Connection

    The origin of the word shy can be traced back to the Old English word scéoh, in connection to Middle High German schiech and various other words in Middle Dutch, Middle Danish, and Norwegian, all meaning timid. Although shy does not have a Spanish cognate, timid does—tímido.

    Word Changes

    Although students may not be familiar with the idiom “shrinking violet,” they may be familiar with some of the visual representations of this phrase. For example, the two shy violets in Disney’s Alice in Wonderland in the garden scene. Or the character Shy Violet from the late 1980’s TV show, Rainbow Brite. A more current example is the character Violet from Disney Pixar’s The Incredibles. Although it is difficult to trace the origin of the idiom, it gained popularity in the late 1800’s in both Europe and North America, possibly because violets were, at the time, the third most commercially grown flower.

    Shy Morpho

    S4-08-Shy (1.3 MB)