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daring adjective [ ˈdɛːrɪŋ ]

• (of a person or action) adventurous or audaciously bold.
• "a daring crime"
Similar: bold, audacious, adventurous, intrepid, venturesome, fearless, brave, unafraid, unshrinking, undaunted, dauntless, valiant, valorous, heroic, dashing, confident, enterprising, madcap, rash, reckless, heedless, gutsy, spunky, peppy, pushy, adventuresome, venturous,
Opposite: cowardly, cautious,

daring noun

• adventurous courage.
• "the daring of the players brings fortune or ruin"
Similar: boldness, audacity, temerity, audaciousness, fearlessness, intrepidity, bravery, courage, courageousness, valour, valorousness, heroism, pluck, recklessness, rashness, foolhardiness, adventurousness, enterprise, dynamism, spirit, mettle, confidence, nerve, guts, gutsiness, spunk, grit, bottle, ballsiness, moxie, cojones, sand, venturousness, temerariousness, balls,
Opposite: cowardice, caution,

dare verb

• have the courage to do something.
• "a story he dare not write down"
Similar: be brave enough, have the courage, pluck up courage, take the risk, venture, have the nerve, have the temerity, make so bold as, be so bold as, have the effrontery, have the audacity, presume, go so far as, risk doing, hazard doing, take the liberty of doing, stick one's neck out, go out on a limb, take a flyer, make bold to,
• defy or challenge (someone) to do something.
• "she was daring him to disagree"
Similar: challenge, provoke, goad, taunt, defy, summon, invite, bid, throw down the gauntlet to,
• take the risk of; brave.
• "few dared his wrath"
Origin: Old English durran, of Germanic origin; related to Gothic gadaursan, from an Indo-European root shared by Greek tharsein and Sanskrit dhṛṣ- ‘be bold’.


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