Lila’s uncle found out he was hanging around and tried to scare him away, but Spence was daresome and he flirted openly with her, slowing down her work.
Unfortunately, we cannot reinstate the decoration without the help of the darer.
The fabulously titled DIYSCO follows in the mad-cap, running up the walls disco-mania of it’s predecessor, but with subtle darer tones and perhaps even a more polished feel.
Occasionally, there are cutaways to Renaissance or Baroque paintings of Passion events by Rembrandt, Holbein, Darer and others.
(intransitive) To have enough courage (to do something). || (transitive) To defy or challenge (someone to do something) || (transitive) To have enough courage to meet or do something, go somewhere, etc.; to face up to || (transitive) To terrify; to daunt. || (transitive) To catch (larks) by producing terror through the use of mirrors, scarlet cloth, a hawk, etc., so that they lie still till a net is thrown over them.
In a society of individualists nobody dare admit to being a conformist.
Luna could feel a presence around Tiamat that dared people to challenge her.
|adjective|
1.(of a person or action) adventurous or audaciously bold.
‘a _daring_ crime’
‘Following to the recent bugging of the DP offices, our _daring_ team of investigative reporters bugged the DP offices, to see what was on the infamous tapes.’
2.Causing outrage or surprise by being boldly unconventional.
‘he rapidly discovered an audience hungry for his _daring_ new works’
‘I was darnedly self-conscious in my _daring_ clothes.’
|noun|
1.Adventurous courage.
‘the _daring_ of the players brings fortune or ruin’
‘‘A landmark in cinema, an awesome feat of imagination and _daring_ ,’ gushed Christopher Tookey in the Daily Mail.’