How to Use shrinking violet in a Sentence

shrinking violet

noun
  • He's no shrinking violet when it comes to competition.
  • Step aside, shrinking violet, this is a season of the bold and the brilliant.
    Kirby Adams, The Courier-Journal, 28 Mar. 2022
  • At 7 feet tall and 3 feet wide, the tree is no shrinking violet either.
    Courtney Thompson, CNN Underscored, 3 Dec. 2019
  • But in the hands of Maggie Smith, the Dowager Countess was no shrinking violet.
    Elizabeth Holmes, Town & Country, 29 May 2022
  • With regard to size, the Grand Cherokee L is no shrinking violet.
    Karl Brauer, Forbes, 17 June 2021
  • These were clothes for street style snappers—not shrinking violets.
    Vogue, 16 Aug. 2018
  • The contradiction between a man anxious to wreck shop in the Western world and the shrinking violet that was about to meet Putin was striking.
    Aaron Blake, Washington Post, 12 July 2018
  • The kids, who are no shrinking violets in general, were pretty shy with them, But the Clooneys kept engaging them.
    Justin Bishop, Vanities, 25 Mar. 2018
  • These days, civic discourse is not for shrinking violets.
    George Will, National Review, 13 Jan. 2018
  • The United States, though, is no shrinking violet and has lobbed back its fair share of insults and innuendos.
    Barnini Chakraborty, Fox News, 9 Apr. 2020
  • This was not a group of ladylike shrinking violets. ...
    Amanda Blanco, courant.com, 12 Sep. 2019
  • These are images not of shrinking violets but women engaged with the world and one another.
    Sharon Mizota, latimes.com, 19 May 2018
  • These aren't the shrinking violets or breathless ingenues.
    Dana Oland, idahostatesman, 23 May 2018
  • Jonathan Adler is never one to be a shrinking violet—especially when that most wonderful time of year rolls around.
    Anna Fixsen, ELLE Decor, 6 Dec. 2022
  • Maria stops at a charmless Nevada hamlet built around a Walmart and meets a young shrinking violet of a Walmart employee named James.
    Stephanie Burt, The New Yorker, 20 June 2022
  • Brendel, who would be responsible for making calls at the line, is no shrinking violet.
    Adam H. Beasley, miamiherald, 20 Oct. 2017
  • As a result, Biden—whose tactile campaign style makes Bill Clinton seem like a shrinking violet—spent 174 days without doing a single public event.
    Walter Shapiro, The New Republic, 19 Nov. 2020
  • Desperately hoping to move up the food chain at Culture, now called Cult, Anna, a classic shrinking violet with a short, natural ’fro, meets with Zora, equipped with stellar ideas and stats.
    Katie Walsh, Los Angeles Times, 22 Oct. 2020
  • Rush seems determined that Cordelia be no shrinking violet, and that’s a sound decision, but giving Cordelia a declamatory quality is not.
    BostonGlobe.com, 12 July 2021
  • No shrinking violet she, her adventurousness is illustrated by her eighth day hot air ballooning journey through the Loire Valley in France with Howard.
    courant.com, 30 Apr. 2018
  • Few people have ever accused Naomi Campbell of being a shrinking violet.
    Danielle Stein Chizzik, Town & Country, 2 Feb. 2017
  • Fox, never known as a corporate shrinking violet, intends to promote Fox Weather during football telecasts on its broadcast network and via Fox News.
    Brian Steinberg, Variety, 21 Oct. 2021
  • Most people who wade into politics and public service aren’t shrinking violets.
    Chad Pergram, Fox News, 10 Sep. 2018
  • Gruen, never a shrinking violet, predicted his centers — Eastland opened in 1957 — were important beyond shopping, and would change the thinking of city planners, economists, architects and the American public.
    Bill McGraw, Detroit Free Press, 30 Jan. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'shrinking violet.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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