What's the difference between fainthearted and irresolute?

Fainthearted


Definition:

  • (a.) Wanting in courage; depressed by fear; easily discouraged or frightened; cowardly; timorous; dejected.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Running Microsoft is not for the fainthearted: its software is essential to millions of companies around the world, and more than 1 billion people use PCs with its Windows software.

Irresolute


Definition:

  • (a.) Not resolute; not decided or determined; wavering; given to doubt or irresolution.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The number of irresolute responses was significantly decreased following administration of diazepam, SZJ 3388 and Litoralon and was positively correlated with the TEE latency-decreasing activity of these compounds.
  • (2) Right-wing Catholics denounced him as irresolute on issues like Aids, the defence of Catholic schools, and political priests like Mgr Bruce Kent (who later resigned).
  • (3) The White House is considered irresolute on Guantánamo, lacking the force or the desire to impose a coherent policy upon the bureaucracy.
  • (4) At these patients we saw significantly more "valve groups", which witness to the irresolution in the instinctive motivations of behaviour.
  • (5) Smith and his cronies were kept in power by a combination of white redoubt solidarity in southern Africa, deep divisions among Rhodesian-African tribal groups and guerrilla movements, irresolution in London, inertia and insincerity elsewhere - and a small group of white Rhodesian, South African and British army officers, police, security men and sanctions-busters whose cunning knew no bounds.
  • (6) However, its influence on the development of breast cancer and cervical cancer remains irresolute pending further research.
  • (7) To be European is to be somehow effeminate, irresolute and, perhaps worst of all, socialist.
  • (8) Or are we going be profligate again, spend money we don’t have again, borrow forever, mortgage the future of children with the debts we could not pay ourselves, and consign Britain to a future of a high debt, low growth?” Describing Labour as the party of permanent fiscal irresponsibility, he said the charter would bear down on the “irresolution of politicians who lack the discipline to control public spending and deliver growth”.
  • (9) But these words – reconciliation and resolution – are also lies, for what I found, in the absence of reckoning for these refugees and survivors, was post-conflict irresolution.
  • (10) And veteran Observer readers, perhaps, may be forgiven for wondering what the Orwell of Homage to Catalonia would have said today as he surveyed such a panoply of irresolution.
  • (11) Harold Hobson declared that he had "never seen a Hamlet more shot through with the pale agony of irresolution."
  • (12) (The exhibition captioning and catalogue toy with this tactic extensively, if irresolutely, mythologically annotating every scribble and grunt: quite frankly, they're best ignored.)
  • (13) Many, although not all, of the challenges in communities today are informed by the irresolution of unfinished business.

Words possibly related to "fainthearted"