abashing

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English

Adjective

abashing (comparative more abashing, superlative most abashing)

  1. Tending to abash; causing embarrassment or the loss of self-possession.
    Synonyms: bewildering, disconcerting
    • 1684, Increase Mather, chapter 12, in An Essay for the Recording of Illustrious Providences, Boston: Joseph Browning, pages 366–367:
      [] many young People have by the grace of the Lord been prepared for full Communion, and have taken hold of the Covenant, confessing, that they have felt the impression of that Word upon that abashing occasion spoken:
    • 1784, Hannah Cowley, A Bold Stroke for a Husband, London: T. Evans, act III, scene 3, pages 47–48:
      Why these fair girls are so stared at by the men, and the young fellows, now-a-days, have a damn’d impudent stare with them,—’tis very abashing to a woman—very distressing!
    • 1814, Frances Burney, The Wanderer, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, Volume 1, Chapter 9, p. 166,
      the mixt party there assembled, was prepared to survey her with a curiosity which she found extremely abashing.
    • 1925, Sinclair Lewis, chapter 24, in Arrowsmith, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, page 265:
      Before Angus appeared, Martin had to wait a quarter-hour in a smaller, richer, still more abashing reception-room.
    • 2006, Sarah Waters, chapter 3, in The Night Watch, London: Virago, published 1944, page 287:
      But when the roaring died, there was only the silence: the awful, abashing stillness of the prison night.

Derived terms

Verb

abashing

  1. present participle and gerund of abash

Anagrams