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Hesitant

Hesitant is an adjective describing a state of uncertainty or delay in decision or action. A hesitant person may pause before acting, seek additional information, or express doubt about a course of action. The term can describe attitudes, responses, or movements that are not fully confident or decisive.

Etymology: The word derives from the verb hesitate, from Old French hesiter and Latin haesitare, from haerere

Usage and contexts: In everyday language, hesitant describes cautious or unsure behavior, often with to-infinitive: hesitant

Related terms: Hesitation (the noun), hesitant (the adjective form), indecisive, tentative, and cautious are closely connected.

“to
stick”
or
“to
cling.”
The
sense
evolved
to
describe
delaying
or
doubting
before
speaking
or
acting.
The
adjective
hesitant
entered
English
in
the
early
modern
period.
to
commit,
hesitant
about
the
plan.
In
linguistics,
hesitation
can
refer
to
a
speech
disfluency
or
a
marked
pause.
In
psychology,
hesitation
may
reflect
deliberative
processing,
risk
assessment,
or
anxiety,
and
may
be
studied
in
decision-making
tasks
or
as
a
trait
associated
with
indecisiveness.
The
term
is
commonly
used
across
disciplines
and
in
common
speech
to
convey
doubt,
caution,
or
a
reluctance
to
proceed.