Crossword clues for daringly
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Daring \Dar"ing\, a. Bold; fearless; adventurous; as, daring spirits. -- Dar"ing*ly, adv. -- Dar"ing*ness, n.
Wiktionary
adv. In a daring manner; boldly; courageously; fearlessly; impudently.
WordNet
adv. in an original manner; "daringly he took the first step"
in an adventurous manner; "daringly, he set out on a camping trip in East Africa"
Usage examples of "daringly".
His long-cherished antipathy to Scholasticism was well known, but he pursued his course in quiet until 1658, when he was daringly assailed.
She was very daringly dressed, as usual, wearing a very low gown and a long chain and ear-rings of black opals, and as usual all the men in the room were grouped around her.
Frances Yates even goes on to speculate, daringly, that the lost Globe Theatre of Shakespeare was actually built to the design of a real memory theatre.
In any case, cars aquaplaned daringly through these temporary lakes and threw sheets of water over nearby houses and shops.
Genevieve whispered to Glorieta, during afternoon recreation, walking through the gardens on their way to the badminton court, their skirts swishing around their ankles, the long sleeves of their high-necked blouses daringly turned up to expose delicate wrists.
Kiddie, by then in her 40s, twice married with a couple of daughters, daringly used her life savings and a bank loan to buy the company.
The beauty queens of an earlier day showed their knees daringly, and peeped from beneath grotesquely marcelled hair.
After the exigencies of the Season, with its ceaseless breakfasts, balls, routs, race-parties at Ascot, opera-parties, convivial gatherings at Cribb’s Parlour, evenings spent at Watier’s, not to mention the numerous picnics, and al fresco entertainments ranging from quite ordinary parties to some, given by ambitious hostesses, so daringly original that they were talked of for at least three days, the lazy, unexacting life at Hazelfield exactly suited his humour.
Adams then rather daringly showed Henry a letter from a militia major in Massachusetts that concluded, After all, we must fight.
Adams then rather daringly showed Henry a letter from a militia major in Massachusetts that concluded, “.
At the parties there were five or ten temporaries for every citizen, some as mere servants, others as entertainers or even surrogate guests, mingling freely and a little daringly.