English language

How to pronounce insecurity in English?

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Type Words
Type of anxiety
Derivation insecure
Type Words
Type of danger
Has types insecureness
Derivation insecure

Examples of insecurity

insecurity
Thus, when people feel betrayed by brands, they experience shame and insecurity.
From the sciencedaily.com
It should be a call to deal with climate change and poverty and food insecurity.
From the newsweek.com
He says aid workers have to contend with continuing insecurity along the border.
From the voanews.com
There's nothing like a little writing to make the insecurity meter start rising.
From the sacbee.com
But his skin-deep arrogance barely conceals a quivering wariness and insecurity.
From the movies.nytimes.com
That's not a case of concern about privacy as it is a case of social insecurity.
From the techcrunch.com
Ash said it's difficult to fathom that there is food insecurity in this country.
From the sfgate.com
Insecurity is the prime concern for most people in Latin America, ahead of jobs.
From the guardian.co.uk
But it isn't fair to make your boyfriend responsible for fixing your insecurity.
From the psychcentral.com
More examples
  • The state of being subject to danger or injury
  • The anxiety you experience when you feel vulnerable and insecure
  • (insecure) not firm or firmly fixed; likely to fail or give way; "the hinge is insecure"
  • (insecure) lacking in security or safety; "his fortune was increasingly insecure"; "an insecure future"
  • (insecure) not safe from attack
  • The major result of raising parrots with production ethics and little or no emphasis on early socialization is intense insecurity in many companion parrots.
  • The state of not feeling or being safe. Lacking self-confidence; plagued by anxiety.
  • Uncertain, unsafe, fearful or jealous; resulting in putting others down to build up oneself; causing harsh judgment of others.
  • Apprehensiveness and anxiousness evoked by the disruption or threatened disruption of an individual's relationship with a significant other or attachment figure (e.g., with a parent for the child). (See personality subtheory; psychological adjustment)