Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Once he had timorously tried to make love to her.
They held back timorously against those behind, who were pushing them forward.
I suspect that 2003 will shape up as the year of living timorously.
He moved up, and stretched timorously beside her on the bed.
And she speaks timorously about anyone being "mad at me."
She opened the door timorously and peered through the crack.
The other youngster, a boy, approaches the water timorously, changes his mind and turns back.
How many times my mother timorously escorted me into a shoe store only to be told never to return.
Then he glanced up timorously at the old man.
Instead, timorously, he went over to the corpse and checked its label.
Timorously, because there was nothing else she could do, she began to follow him.
"Your place sounded pretty good to me," she braved timorously.
Less timorously, she made her way back to her companions.
A lady must never lounge or sit timorously on the edge of her chair.
Very timorously, they approached the treasures which the robots spread on the ground before them.
The party, crouching low on their mounts, timorously continued across the meadow.
"There are no blonde braids either," she said timorously, surprising her husband once again.
One of the younger rats timorously raised a paw.
The party in power at the time was progressive, mildly pacifist, and timorously cosmopolitan.
Timorously, she followed the scent toward the kitchen.
Nervously, timorously, the native animals crept back to their feeding or hunting grounds.
Anna looked questioningly into her eyes and blushed timorously.
The girl entered the great hall timorously.
"When the moon shines," she said timorously, "and I want to dance, will you clap for me?"
"I love you," she said almost timorously.