English-Thai Dictionary
dare
AUX กล้า ที่จะ เสี่ยง ที่จะ kar-ti-ja-tam
dare
N ความกล้าหาญ การ กล้าเผชิญ ความ ท้าทาย challenge kwam-kla-han
dare
VI กล้า กล้าเผชิญ กล้า เผชิญหน้า กล้าเสี่ยง อาจหาญ ท้าทาย บังอาจ venture brave challenge kar
daredevil
N คนที่ กล้า ทำ ใน สิ่ง ที่ เสี่ยง มาก คน บ้าระห่ำ stuntman stuntwoman kon-ti-kla-tam-nai-sing-ti-siang-mak
daredeviltry
N ความกล้าหาญ กล้าเสี่ยง kwam-klar-harn-klar-siang
dareful
A ที่ เต็มไปด้วย ความกล้า ti-tem-pai-douy-kwam-klar
daren't
ABBR ไม่กล้า (คำย่อ ของ dare not mai-kar
daresay
VI เดา ว่า บางที dao-wa
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DARE
v.i.pret. durst. To have courage to any purpose; to have strength of mind or hardihood to undertake anything; to be bold enough; not to be afraid; to venture; to be adventurous. I dare do all that may become a man. Shak.
Dare any of you go to law before the unjust? 1 Corinthians 6:1.
None of his disciples durst ask him, who art thou. John 21:12.
In this intransitive sense, dare is not generally followed by the sign to before another verb in the infinitive; though to may be used with propriety. In German, the verb is numbered among the auxiliaries. In the transitive form, it is regular; thus,
DARE
v.t.pret. and pp. dared. To challenge; to provoke; to defy; as, to dare a man to fight. Time, I dare thee to discover such a youth and such a lover. Dryden.
To dare larks, to catch them by means of a looking glass, or by keeping a bird of prey hovering aloft, which keeps them in amaze till caught; to terrify or amaze.
DARE
Defiance; challenge.
DARE
n.A small fish, the same as the dace.
DARED
pp. Challenged; defied.
DAREFUL
a.Full of defiance.
DARER
n.One who dares or defies.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DARE
Dare, v. i. [imp. Durst or Dared (; p. p. Dared; p. pr. & vb. n.Daring. ] Etym: [OE. I dar, dear, I dare, imp. dorste, durste, AS. ic dear I dare, imp. dorste. inf. durran; akin to OS. gidar, gidorsta, gidurran, OHG. tar, torsta, turran, Goth. gadar, gadaúrsta, Gr. tharsei ^n, tharrei ^n, to be bold, tharsy `s bold, Skr. Dhrsh to be bold. sq. root7 .]
Defn: To have adequate or sufficient courage for any purpose; to be bold or venturesome; not to be afraid; to venture. I dare do all that may become a man; Who dares do more is none. Shak. Why then did not the ministers use their new law Bacause they durst not, because they could not. Macaulay. Who dared to sully her sweet love with suspicion. Thackeray. The tie of party was stronger than the tie of blood, because a partisan was more ready to dare without asking why. Jowett (Thu
Note: The present tense, I dare, is really an old past tense, so that the third person is he dare, but the form he dares is now often used, and will probably displace the obsolescent he dare, through grammatically as incorrect as he shalls or he cans. Skeat.The pore dar plede (the poor man dare plead ). P. Plowman. You know one dare not discover you. Dryden. The fellow dares nopt deceide me. Shak. Here boldly spread thy hands, no venom'd weed Dares blister them, no slimly snail dare creep. Beau. & Fl.
Note: Formerly durst was also used as the present. Sometimes the old form dare is found for durst or dared.
DARE
Dare, v. y. [imp. & p. p. Dared; p. pr. & vb. n. Daring. ]
1. To have courage for; to attempt courageously; to venture to do or to undertake. What high concentration of steady feeling makes men dare every thing and do anything Bagehot.To wrest it from barbarism, to dare its solitudes. The Century.
2. To challenge; to provoke; to defy. Time, I dare thee to discover Such a youth and such a lover. Dryden.
DARE
DARE Dare, n.
1. The quality of daring; venturesomeness; boldness; dash. [R.] It lends a luster. .. A large dare to our great enterprise. Shak.
2. Defiance; challenge. Childish, unworthy dares Are not enought to part our powers. Chapman. Sextus Pompeius Hath given the dare to Cæsar. Shak.
DARE
Dare, v. i. Etym: [OE. darien, to lie hidden, be timid. ]
Defn: To lurk; to lie hid. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
DARE
DARE Dare, v. t.
Defn: To terrify; to daunt. [Obs. ] For I have done those follies, those mad mischiefs, Would dare a woman. Beau. & Fl. To dare larks, to catch them by producing terror through to use of mirrors, scarlet cloth, a hawk, etc. , so that they lie still till a net is thrown over them. Nares.
DARE
Dare, n. Etym: [See Dace. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: A small fish; the dace.
DARE-DEVIL
DARE-DEVIL Dare "-dev `il, n.
Defn: A reckless fellow. Also used adjectively; as, dare-devil excitement. A humorous dare-devil -- the very man To suit my prpose. Ld. Lytton.
DARE-DEVILTRY
Dare "-dev `il *try, n; pl. Dare-deviltries (.
Defn: Reckless mischief; the action of a dare-devil.
DAREFUL
DAREFUL Dare "ful, a.
Defn: Full af daring or of defiance; adveturous. [R.] Shak.
DARER
DARER Dar "er, n.
Defn: One who dares or defies.
New American Oxford Dictionary
dare
dare |de (ə )r dɛ (ə )r | ▶verb (3rd sing. present usu. dare before an expressed or implied infinitive without to ) 1 (usu. with infinitive with or without to often with negative ) have the courage to do something: a story he dare not write down | she leaned forward as far as she dared. 2 [ with obj. and infinitive ] defy or challenge (someone ) to do something: she was daring him to disagree | [ with obj. ] : swap with me, I dare you. 3 [ with obj. ] literary take the risk of; brave: few dared his wrath. ▶noun a challenge, esp. to prove courage: athletes who eat ground glass on a dare . PHRASES don't you dare used to order someone threateningly not to do something: don't you dare touch me! how dare you used to express indignation: how dare you talk to me like that! I dare say (or daresay ) used to indicate that one believes something is probable: I dare say you've heard about her. DERIVATIVES dar er noun 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. ’
Dare, Virginia
Dare, Virginia |de (ə )r dɛr | (1587 –?), first English child born in North America. Born on Roanoke Island, Virginia, to Ananias Dare and Elinor White, she disappeared with the other 117 Roanoke colonists, as was discovered in 1591.
daredevil
dare dev il |ˈde (ə )rˌdevəl ˈdɛrˌdɛvəl | ▶noun a reckless person who enjoys doing dangerous things. ▶adjective [ attrib. ] reckless and daring. DERIVATIVES dare dev il ry |-rē |noun
daresay
daresay |ˈde (ə )rˈsā ˈdɛ (ə )rˈseɪ | ▶verb see dare.
Oxford Dictionary
dare
dare |dɛː | ▶verb ( 3rd sing. present usu. dare before an expressed or implied infinitive ) 1 (as modal usu. with infinitive with or without to often with negative ) have the courage to do something: a story he dare not write down | she leaned forward as far as she dared. • (how dare you ) used to express indignation at something: how dare you talk to me like that! • (don't you dare ) used to order someone threateningly not to do something: don't you dare touch me. 2 [ with obj. and infinitive ] defy or challenge (someone ) to do something: she was daring him to disagree | [ with obj. ] : swap with me, I dare you. 3 [ with obj. ] literary take the risk of; brave: few dared his wrath. ▶noun a challenge, especially to prove courage: she ran across a main road for a dare . PHRASES I dare say (or daresay ) used to indicate that one believes something is probable: I dare say you've heard about her. DERIVATIVES darer noun 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 ’.
Dare, Virginia
Dare, Virginia |de (ə )r dɛr | (1587 –?), first English child born in North America. Born on Roanoke Island, Virginia, to Ananias Dare and Elinor White, she disappeared with the other 117 Roanoke colonists, as was discovered in 1591.
daredevil
dare |devil |ˈdɛːdɛv (ə )l | ▶noun a reckless person who enjoys doing dangerous things. ▶adjective reckless and daring. DERIVATIVES daredevilry noun
American Oxford Thesaurus
dare
dare verb 1 everyone wanted to say something, but nobody dared: be brave enough, have the courage; venture, have the nerve, have the temerity, be so bold as, have the audacity; risk, hazard, take the liberty, stick one's neck out, go out on a limb. 2 she dared him to go: challenge, defy, invite, bid, provoke, goad; throw down the gauntlet. ▶noun she accepted the dare: challenge, provocation, goad; gauntlet, invitation. USAGE dare It's been called “one of the subtlest and most variegated verbs in the language ” (Robert W. Burchfield, Points of View; 1992 ) and also “one of the trickiest ” (William Safire, “Love That Dare, ” New York Times; May 17, 1987 ). The subtleties arise because dare is both an ordinary verb ( he dares you to pick up the snake ) and a modal verb ( he dare not do it himself ). And the form it takes ( dares vs. dare in those examples ) changes with that grammatical function. When dare is used as a full verb, it behaves just like most other verbs: it takes an -s with a third-person singular subject ( Robert always speaks his mind bluntly and dares anyone to disagree ). The form is identifiable by the presence of an explicit infinitive (with to ) after dare (here, to disagree ). Dare was an Old English modal. When it is used as an auxiliary verb (like the modern modals will, must, and, more closely, ought ), the infinitive either is missing its to ( dare he disagree with Robert? ) or is missing altogether but understood ( he dare not! ). This occurs chiefly, but not only, in interrogative or negative sentences. In those sentences, the form dares —although sometimes used mistakenly in striving for correctness —would be unidiomatic, because dare in this usage behaves like other uninflected modals ( will he disagree with Robert? | he must not ) As a modal verb, dare raises an interesting question of tense: in reference to past time, should one write (1 ) “Although challenged to do it, he dare not, ” or (2 ) “Although challenged to do it, he dared not ”? The Oxford English Dictionary endorses the first and calls the second “careless, ” but that advice was written when that part of the great dictionary was published in 1894 (and the dandy but now archaic durst was still available ). More recent grammarians are more lenient —e.g.: “As a modal, dare exhibits abnormal time reference in that it can be used, without inflection, for past as well as present time: ‘The king was so hot-tempered that no one dare tell him the bad news. ’ The main verb form dared (to ) might also occur here. ” (Randolph Quirk et al. , A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language; 1985.) These more modern grammarians ’ analyses are borne out by actual usage —e.g.: “Mayo said he dared not declare it a little blue heron without confirmation from others.” ( Hartford Courant; Dec. 23, 2001.) It is odd, however, to see the past-tense form in the set phrase how dare you —e.g.: “ ‘How dared you! ’ Jon shouted, waving his arms for emphasis. ‘That dish was ours, the property of the entire Order! How dared you even think to appropriate it for your own uses!” (Patricia C. Wrede, Mairelon the Magician; 1991.) The form durst, which is a past indicative and past subjunctive along with dared, is obsolete in American English. In British English, it still occurs rarely, always in a negative sentence or conditional clause in which there is an infinitive either understood or having no to ( none durst answer him ). The exclamatory construction How dare he do that! is an idiomatic phrasing of the interrogative How (does /did he ) dare (to ) do that? The subject /actor ( he ) appears after the verb ( dare ) and is always in the nominative case —e.g.: “How dare she tell taxpayers to take on more responsibility to help neighborhood kids? How dare she be right? ” ( Cincinnati Enquirer; Aug. 18, 2002.).Usage notes show additional guidance on finer points of English usage.
daredevil
daredevil noun a young daredevil crashed his car: thrill-seeker, adventurer, madcap, exhibitionist, swashbuckler; stuntman; informal show-off. ▶adjective a daredevil skydiver: daring, bold, audacious, intrepid, fearless, madcap, dauntless; heedless, reckless, rash, impulsive, impetuous, foolhardy, incautious, imprudent, harum-scarum. ANTONYMS cowardly, cautious.
Oxford Thesaurus
dare
dare verb 1 nobody dared to say a word: 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; informal stick one's neck out, go out on a limb; N. Amer. informal take a flyer; archaic make bold to. 2 she dared him to go: challenge, provoke, goad, taunt, defy, summon, invite, bid; throw down the gauntlet to. ▶noun she didn't quite know why she accepted the dare: challenge, provocation, goad, taunt; gauntlet, invitation, ultimatum, summons.
daredevil
daredevil noun spectators watched in horror as the nineteen-year-old daredevil smashed into the ground: madcap, hothead, adventurer, exhibitionist, swashbuckler; stuntman; Brit. tearaway; informal show-off, showboat; dated desperado. ANTONYMS coward. ▶adjective a daredevil skydiver: daring, bold, adventurous, madcap, hot-headed, audacious, courageous, brave, intrepid, fearless, death-or-glory, undaunted, dauntless, heedless; reckless, rash, hasty, impulsive, precipitous, impetuous, wild, desperate, foolhardy, incautious, imprudent, ill-advised, hare-brained; Brit. tearaway; informal harum-scarum, bull-in-a-china-shop. ANTONYMS cowardly; cautious.
Duden Dictionary
dareinfinden
da r ein fin den , da rein fin den starkes Verb gehoben |dar ei nfinden |sich dareinfinden; Perfektbildung mit »hat « sich damit abfinden; sich darauf einstellen sie muss sich nach dem Tod ihres Mannes erst langsam dareinfinden , nun alles allein zu entscheiden
dareinmischen
da r ein mi schen , da rein mi schen schwaches Verb gehoben |dar ei nmischen |sich dareinmischen; Perfektbildung mit »hat « sich in diese Sache, Angelegenheit einmischen, ohne Aufforderung an dieser Sache teilnehmen
dareinsetzen
da r ein set zen , da rein set zen schwaches Verb gehoben |dar ei nsetzen |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « aufbieten, einsetzen, mobilisieren er setzte seinen Ehrgeiz darein, als Erster fertig zu sein
Daressalam
Da r es sa lam , Da res sa lam Eigenname |D a ressal a m |frühere Hauptstadt von Tansania
French Dictionary
dare-dare
dare-dare loc. adv. locution adverbiale familier Très rapidement. : Ils se sont enfuis dare-dare.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
dare
dare /deə r /〖原義は 「大胆である 」〗動詞 ~s /-z /; ~d /-d /, ⦅古 ⦆durst /dəː r st /; daring 他動詞 1 〖dare (to ) do 〗〈人が 〉あえて …する , …する勇気がある, 思い切って … する [できる ]; 生意気にも [大胆にも ]…する (!進行形にしない; しばしば否定文で ) ▸ No one dared (to ) come near to talk with the stranger .だれも近づいてその見知らぬ男と話そうとはしなかった ▸ Does he dare to go to such a dangerous place? 彼はそんな危険な所に行く勇気があるのか ▸ She hardly dared to breathe .彼女はほとんど息をつくことができなかった ▸ If he dares to say one word, he'll regret it .生意気に一言でも口にしたら彼はきっと後悔するよ ▸ Sam wanted to kiss her, but of course he didn't dare .サムは彼女にキスしたかったが, もちろんそんな勇気はなかった (!文脈から明らかな場合, to do以下が省略されることがある ) .2 〖dare A to do 〗〈人が 〉A 〈人 〉に …できるものならしてみろと言う , Aに … するように挑む [要求する ] (!toは省略しない ) ▸ I dare you to jump into the river .川に飛び込めるものならやってみろ ▸ Go on! I dare you! ⦅話 ⦆さあ, やってみろ [やってごらん ]3 ⦅主に文 ⦆〈危険など 〉に立ち向かう .D ò n't you d á re (do )! =(J ù st ) you d á re! ⦅話 非難して ⦆(…したら )承知しないぞ, (そんなことは )やめなさい (!警告を表す ) ▸ Don't you dare tell him I said it! 私がそれをしゃべったってこと絶対彼に言わないでよ You w ò uldn't d á re (to do )!まさか, 本気 (で …するん )じゃないだろうね .助動詞 〖通例否定文 疑問文 if [whether ] 節で 〗あえて [思い切って ]…する ▸ Dare he do it? 彼にそれをやる勇気があるのか ▸ She daren't disobey her superior .彼女は上司が怖くて逆らえない d à re I s á y [sugg é st ] it ⦅かたい話 ⦆〖挿入句的に 〗信じられないかもしれませんが (!相手が失望する [怒る ]のを予測した上で述べる ) .H ò w d á re A do !⦅話 非難して ⦆よくA 〈人 〉はずうずうしく …できるね (!Aは人称代名詞, 特にyouが多い; 人の言動に対する怒り 驚きを表す ) ▸ How dare you come here again! よくもまあまたここへ来られたね I d à re s á y [d à res á y ]1 ⦅主に英話 ⦆〖文頭 文末で 〗多分, おそらく (I suppose ) (!⦅米 ⦆では ⦅やや古 ⦆; 節が続く場合もthatは付かない ) ▸ I dare say he doesn't know the truth .おそらく彼は真相を知らないだろう 2 (それは )そうかもしれない 【がしかし 】 «but » .3 〖dare sayで 〗 «…と » あえて言う «that 節 » .名詞 C 〖通例 a ~〗挑発, 挑戦 ▸ for [on ] a dare 挑発されたので ▸ as a dare 挑発のつもりで ; あえて ▸ take a dare 挑戦を受ける
daredevil
d á re d è vil 名詞 C 向こう見ずな人, 命知らず .形容詞 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗向こう見ずな, 命知らずの .
daren't
daren't /de r (ə )nt |deənt /⦅主に英 くだけた話 ⦆dare notの短縮形 .
daresay
d à re s á y 動詞 他動詞 =dare say (→I dare say ).