@Paige Hawthorne
What I tried to imply was a pinched personality โ a lack of warmth, a dearth of empathy.
A LOT of 'Show, Don't Tell' boils down to descriptions. Not the, "he worried", but descriptions of the character's facial expressions, their reactions, or any nervous tics. Though it's NOT an easy technique to develop. Despite struggling with it over the years, I only have a standard set of responses (per emotion) after all this time.
If you want to be terse, rather than wasting a full paragraph on each Show, just pare it down to a succinct action verb:
"That dress is way too short, young lady!"
Emma glanced down, shrugged and lifted her skirt, exposing even more of her legs. "If you say so, though I was trying to constrain myself."
However, I've been working to write tersely for years. My story posting now, Building a Nest of Our Own, is a horrible example. Between introducing entirely new concepts, including explaining the difference between mark matter and dark energy, it also has to re-explain everything that happened in the previous two books. So the writing quickly becomes a bit tedious.
My newest book, The Holes Binding Us Together, is completely different, though. Since I'm dealing with young kids, with one pretending to be even younger than she is, I got to play around, not just with their voices but with using very succinct language, also having to dump most of my vocabulary in the process.
The results were eye-opening, especially when you compare the sentences between the kids and those of the adults surrounding them. However, the situation in the story forces them to grow up way too soon, so their language grows progressively longer over the course of the book.
I've also noticed that most of the Great and/or Popular authors are masters, not just of word play, but of 'quotable responses', which require brevity. Think of it as reducing an angry curse by two-thirds, while also making it both funny and memorable. I'm still working on that, but learning how to pare down someone's language to make it terser is a major step in the process.