Rating | Solver | Clue |
---|---|---|
HESITANT | Reluctant | |
LOATH | Reluctant | |
DISINCLINED | Reluctant | |
UNWILLING | Reluctant | |
HANGBACK | Hesitate or be reluctant | |
RELUCTANTLY | In a reluctant manner. | |
BACKWARD | Unwilling; averse; reluctant; hesitating; loath. | |
CONVICTS | Sentences reluctant immigrants of the past | |
AVERSE | Reluctant to state emphatically, with initials | |
HATED | Was totally reluctant to see death’s alterations | |
READY | Prepared in mind or disposition; not reluctant; willing; free; inclined; disposed. | |
HESITATE | To utter with hesitation or to intimate by a reluctant manner. | |
RELUCTANT | Proceeding from an unwilling mind; granted with reluctance; as, reluctant obedience. | |
INVOLUNTARY | Not proceeding from choice; done unwillingly; reluctant; compulsory; as, involuntary submission. | |
SCRUPLE | To be reluctant or to hesitate, as regards an action, on account of considerations of conscience or expedience. | |
GRUDGE | To be covetous or envious; to show discontent; to murmur; to complain; to repine; to be unwilling or reluctant. | |
RELUCTANCY | The state or quality of being reluctant; repugnance; aversion of mind; unwillingness; -- often followed by an infinitive, or by to and a noun, formerly sometimes by against. | |
LINGER | To delay; to loiter; to remain or wait long; to be slow or reluctant in parting or moving; to be slow in deciding; to be in suspense; to hesitate. |