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Cower   /kˈaʊər/   Listen
verb
Cower  v. t.  To cherish with care. (Obs.)



Cower  v. i.  (past & past part. cowered; pres. part. cowering)  To stoop by bending the knees; to crouch; to squat; hence, to quail; to sink through fear. "Our dame sits cowering o'er a kitchen fire." "Like falcons, cowering on the nest."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Cower" Quotes from Famous Books



... inspected the list at the office to see whether our names were there—in order to avoid us. But you cannot avoid us. We do not mean that you shall avoid us. We will dog you now through life—not by lies or subterfuges, as you say, but openly and honestly. It is YOU who need to slink and cower, not we. The prosecutor need not descend to the ...
— Hilda Wade - A Woman With Tenacity Of Purpose • Grant Allen

... sir?" She turned into a narrow path in the shadow of arches, clothed by a great Austrian brier, on which here and there a yellow flame still glowed. "Mr. Boyce—when I meet you in company you shrink and cower detestably; when I meet you alone, you fence with me impudently enough and shrewdly; and always you avoid me while you can. I suppose there's in all this something more than the freaks of a fool. Then it's fear. Prithee, sir, why in God's name are ...
— The Highwayman • H.C. Bailey

... she began to cower. She shrank back in her seat, putting up her hands to shield her face ...
— The Pagans • Arlo Bates

... before which even Eliza herself, hardened wretch as she seemed, used to cower and shiver; and that was the great black bumble-bee, the largest and most powerful of the British bee-kind. When one of these dangerous monsters, a burly, buzzing bourgeois, got entangled in her web, Eliza, shaking in her shoes (I allow her those shoes by poetical ...
— Science in Arcady • Grant Allen

... of a dying man. A fitful storm was brewing, and between the plashes of rain on the windows there was the silence of death. All nature suffers in such moments, the trees writhe in pain and hide their heads; the birds of the fields cower under the bushes; the streets of cities are deserted. I was suffering from my wound. But a short time before I had a mistress and a friend. The mistress had deceived me and the friend had stretched me on a bed of pain. I could not ...
— Child of a Century, Complete • Alfred de Musset


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