English to Spanish Dictionary insecure

insecure

inseguro
definition
adjective
a top model who is notoriously insecure about her looks
(of a person) not confident or assured; uncertain and anxious.
(of a thing) not firm or set; unsafe.
translation of 'insecure'
adjective
no seguro,
inseguro
example
In the Furness area, which includes Barrow, there were 404 burglaries, of which 36 per cent were due to 'insecure' doors and windows.
The front door remains 'insecure' from the last time it was kicked in.
During the last two years my parents' insistence on an arranged marriage, to a Pakistani Muslim girl, has made me feel increasingly 'insecure' and anxious.
Their tenure of office was uncertain and 'insecure' .
Unfortunately due to an 'insecure' external door he was able to slip out of a communal area within the custody unit into the rear enclosed car park of the police station.
Only weeks before she had written to the council because of concerns about the 'insecure' front door.
Many of these children become aligned with only one parent so they become less anxious and 'insecure' .
Officers were visiting homes and where they find windows and doors 'insecure' they will hand out crime prevention advice to residents.
None of us wanted to ‘need’ cigarettes almost desperately and to feel 'insecure' and anxious without them.
Without the ordinary user being able to make reasonable decisions about risk avoidance and risk acceptance, computers and networks are 'insecure' .
Children who learn at a different pace or are anxious or 'insecure' can also be targets for bullies.
Thus, the confident, happy associate or secretary may be more likely to complain than her 'insecure' , anxious counterpart.
His answers were not satisfactory, and it appeared that he may well have been referring, not to the hazard lights, but to an internal warning light telling him that there was an open or 'insecure' door.
Many of these systems have 'insecure' password management and are vulnerable to account spoofing and denial-of-service attacks.
It's normal to feel 'insecure' , but don't cower and avoid uncertainty.
Perhaps I am feeling anxious and 'insecure' , unappreciated, frustrated, and unable to take care of things and people that matter to me.
The buses banned immediately were found to have defective brakes, tyres, air leaks, 'insecure' doors and seats.
Acting Sergeant Paul Evans from Skipton Police said that residents needed to be mindful about leaving their doors and windows open or 'insecure' in the warm weather.
A spokesman for West Yorrkshire police said an 'insecure' back door of the the semi-derelict house had been forced and they were treating the attack as a burglary with racial overtones.
The door had been left 'insecure' as she was expecting her home help to call.
By a cruel twist the town's All Saints' Church was locked for much of last week because one of its inner doors was 'insecure' .
It has a particular resonance among the disaffected middle classes, who have become increasingly anxious and 'insecure' as a result of wider social and political shifts over the past decade.
I am also feeling anxious and 'insecure' and I'm not really sure why.
They appear anxious, 'insecure' , cautious, sensitive and quiet, and often react by crying and withdrawing.
I feel: 'insecure' , confused, uncertain, jealous, stupid, useless, used, saddened, frustrated, and so on.
The obsession with the far right tells us far more about 'insecure' and uncertain elites than it does about political reality on the ground.
A fanatical believer is a very 'insecure' and fearful person.
It must be brought in before the Olympics to protect those in this 'insecure' accommodation.
It is no surprise, in these circumstances, that survey after survey shows that workers feel more 'insecure' and anxious than at any time in our peacetime history.
A neglectful, stressed or inconsistent parent gave the kind of care which tended to lead to anxious, 'insecure' or avoidant children.
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