Crossword clues for modest
modest
- Unspectacular ways of operating trains initially
- Unassuming ways associated with leader of team
- Unassuming; small
- Not excessive
- Opposite of vain
- Followed secretly
- Not pretentious
- Not at all vain
- Not at all boastful
- Hardly boastful
- Disinclined to brag
- Not showy
- Not prone to bragging
- Not apt to crow
- Far from boastful
- Unlikely to brag
- Unlike a braggart
- Tending to underplay one's achievements
- Opposite of arrogant
- Not likely to brag
- How humblebraggers try to be
- Hardly extravagant
- Free from pomp or affectation
- Far from vain
- Far from showy
- Far from grand
- Far from extravagant
- Composer Moussorgsky
- Hardly given to exhibitionism
- Far from glitzy
- Not boastful
- Fair to middling
- Noted chairman
- Not given to self-promotion
- Not overdone
- Limited in amount
- Unlike a showboat
- Not extreme
- Hardly grand
- Unpretentious
- Retiring
- Humble
- Unassuming
- Far from forward
- Demure
- Swift's "A ___ Proposal . . . "
- Reserved; retiring
- Not given to bravado
- Majority welcome editor on return, self-effacing
- Way, way humble
- Small in two ways?
- Simple poem in manuscript ending in basket
- Humble saint, after a fashion
- Humble in more ways than one
- Plain or flash coat for detective on street?
- Two ways to be demure
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Modest \Mod"est\, a. [F. modeste, L. modestus, fr. modus measure. See Mode.]
Restraining within due limits of propriety; not forward, bold, boastful, or presumptious; rather retiring than pushing one's self forward; not obstructive; as, a modest youth; a modest man.
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Observing the proprieties of the sex; not unwomanly in act or bearing; free from undue familiarity, indecency, or lewdness; decent in speech and demeanor; -- said of a woman.
Mrs. Ford, the honest woman, the modest wife.
--Shak.The blushing beauties of a modest maid.
--Dryden. -
Evincing modestly in the actor, author, or speaker; not showing presumption; not excessive or extreme; moderate; as, a modest request; modest joy.
Syn: Reserved; unobtrusive; diffident; bashful; coy; shy; decent; becoming; chaste; virtuous.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1560s, "having moderate self-regard," from Middle French modeste (14c.), from Latin modestus "keeping due measure" (see modesty). Of women, "not improper or lewd," 1590s; of female attire, 1610s. Of demands, etc., c.1600. Related: Modestly.
Wiktionary
a. 1 Not bragging or boasting about oneself or one's achievements, unpretentious, humble. 2 Small, moderate in size. 3 (especially of behaviour or clothing) Avoiding being sexually suggestive.
WordNet
adj. marked by simplicity; having a humble opinion of yourself; "a modest apartment"; "too modest to wear his medals" [ant: immodest]
not large but sufficient in size or amount; "a modest salary"; "modest inflation"; "helped in my own small way" [syn: small]
free from pomp or affectation; "comfortable but modest cottages"; "a simple rectangular brick building"; "a simple man with simple tastes"
not offensive to sexual mores in conduct or appearance [ant: immodest]
low or inferior in station or quality; "a humble cottage"; "a lowly parish priest"; "a modest man of the people"; "small beginnings" [syn: humble, low, lowly, small]
humble in spirit or manner; suggesting retiring mildness or even cowed submissiveness; "meek and self-effacing" [syn: meek, mild]
limited in size or scope; "a small business"; "a newspaper with a modest circulation"; "small-scale plans"; "a pocket-size country" [syn: minor, small, small-scale, pocket-size, pocket-sized]
free from ostentation or pretension; "the restrained elegance of the room" [syn: restrained, unostentatious]
Wikipedia
thumb|right|Modestus.Saint Modest (died 489) was bishop of Trier when the Franks gained control over the city of Trier and he is considered a Pre-Congregational Saint. His feast day is 24 February.
Despite the turmoil he lived through he died in Trier in 489 of natural causes and his relics are enshrined in the church Saint Matthias, Trier, Germany.
Modest is a free, open source, email client developed by Nokia's maemo project. Small and lightweight, it is intended for use on hardware with “modest” resources, in particular Nokia's N800 and N810 Internet Tablets running Internet Tablet OS 2008, as well as the N900 mobile phone running Maemo. Modest is based on the lightweight Tinymail email framework.
Modest may refer to:
- A number of saints, see under Saint Modest (disambiguation)
- Michael Modest (born 1971), semi-retired American professional wrestler
- Modest (email client), a free, open source, e-mail client
People with the given name Modest:
- Modestus (Apostle of Carantania) or Modest of Carinthia, saint, 8th century
- Modest (bishop of Trier) (died 489), German saint
- Modest Altschuler (1873–1963), cellist, orchestral conductor, and composer
- Modest Isopescu (1895-1948), soldier, administrator and convicted war criminal
- Modest Morariu (1929–1988), poet, essayist, prose writer and translator
- Modest Mussorgsky (1839–1881), Russian composer
- Modest Romiszewski (1861–1930), military theorist
- Modest Schoepen ( Bobbejaan Schoepen) (1925–2010), Belgian singer-songwriter, entertainer and founder of the Bobbejaanland amusement park
- Modest Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1850–1916), Russian dramatist, opera librettist and translator
- Modest Urgell (1839–1919), Spanish painter, illustrator, and playwright
In fiction:
- Modesty Blaise, comic book character
Usage examples of "modest".
Now a sleet of bullets hissed through their ranks as they retired, and the gallant Lord Airlie, as modest and brave a soldier as ever drew sword, was struck through the heart.
Down below, Alayne must dress modestly, as befit a girl of modest birth.
Jamie had planned on visits only to the two Cherokee villages closest to the Treaty Line, there to announce his new position, distribute modest gifts of whisky and tobaccothis last hastily borrowed from Tom Christie, who had fortunately purchased a hogshead of the weed on a seed-buying trip to Cross Creekand inform the Cherokee that further largesse might be expected when he undertook ambassage to the more distant villages in the autumn.
Alexander ascended his tribunal, and with a modest firmness represented to the armed multitude the absolute necessity, as well as his inflexible resolution, of correcting the vices introduced by his impure predecessor, and of maintaining the discipline, which could not be relaxed without the ruin of the Roman name and empire.
It is the tale of a certain man, of humble bearing and modest occupation, named Ali Baba, and how a chance encounter led him to great wealth and even greater danger.
No one had suspected the great genius of Joanna Baillie, so thick a veil of modest reserve had covered it.
At the time I speak of Knox was the Recorder of that important borough, and was possessed of all the dignity which so enhances a great officer in the eyes of the public, whether he be the most modest of beadles in beadledom, or the highest Recorder in Christendom.
When I returned to the dock on foot, Martha had removed her modest pantsuit, revealing herself in an immodest bikini, striped blue and white wherever there was material enough to hold a stripe.
General Vinoy has to-day issued a proclamation to the troops, which in its plain, simple, modest language contrasts very favourably with the inflated bombast in which his predecessor was so great an adept.
The referees there had agreed that 2nd Battalion and the Condaro had driven them off with fairly heavy Booly casualties and only modest casualties of their own.
But it was clear enough that Mr Buskin was a great personage in his way, and extremely modest into the bargain.
I was extremely surprised, on entering the apartment I was to occupy, to see a pretty young woman who came up to me in a modest way to kiss my hand.
But the cimbalom was no meek and modest dulcimer, to be overwhelmed by the rest of the band.
To unripe codlings, meant to dwell In modest shadow hidden well, Till this green stage again permute To glow of flowers with good of fruit.
Doing so allowed the companies to reapply the earlier razor-and-razor-blade model, because the copier machines could be priced at a more modest gross margin, while the replacement cartridges could be priced with very high gross margins.