“It will be interesting, over the course of this campaign, to see what's underneath the cageyness.”
“Yet there is still a cageyness about the man who knows his reputation and popularity will be back on the tonight.”
“I think one of the reasons for some MPs' cageyness is that some are hoping that discussions about improving political accountability are starting to fade.”
“He approached the witness with caginess, wary of revealing too much information to a stranger.”
“The detective's caginess during the interrogation was evident as he carefully avoided revealing any information that could compromise the ongoing investigation.”
“But the comparison to Eisenhower's notorious caginess strikes me as quite inapt.”