Word of the Day: Dare
To dare someone is to offer a situation that is dangerous or risky. A dare is a challenge. Sometimes “dare” is used as a figure of speech (The words don’t have a literal meaning).
- Tanya dared her husband to eat the entire pizza.
- Children sometimes dare each other to do dangerous things on playground equipment.
- The company is going to dare its employees to go on strike.
- I dare you to go over to that woman over there and ask her for a date.
- His friends dared him to ride his skateboard up and down the ramp.
The word “dare” can also be used as a noun:
- He rode his skateboard up and down the ramp on a dare.
- The man tried to swim across the river on a dare, but the current was too strong and he drowned.
- Kids like to play “truth or dare.”
This word can be used when shaming or warning another person:
- How dare you do that!
- How dare she leave her kids alone!
- Don’t you dare do that!
When you change the word to an adjective, it becomes “daring.”
- A daring rescue attempt succeeded when the plane landed in the ocean.
- That was a daring move. (It was risky.)
- Batman and Robin are also known as the “Daring Duo.”
- She’s wearing a very daring dress. (The word “daring,” when used for a dress, means that it reveals a lot of skin or it’s very unusual.)
Note: A daredevil is a person who takes enormous risks for the sake of entertaining other people. Daredevils jump off of mountains, ride motorcycles through hoops of fire, and climb skyscrapers, among other things.
Essential English Dictionary
Visit the Popular English Words Beginning with D page to see the list of all words starting with letter D. For seeing the HiCafe dictionary, visit the Popular English Words with Meaning page.