![]() ![]() Winning is about expanding the electorate.From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English brave brave 1 / breɪv / And I will always be grateful to him for his selfless, brave actions.īut that will probably never happen because Democrats don't go anywhere these days where they're not being adored, and that's my last bit of advice to them. ![]() ![]() he who leads needs to have a strong heart and be brave, if he can't, he should leave.īill ran towards the shooter and towards danger so that he could help subdue him until the authorities arrived, i believe that Bill helped save lives that morning. A wise person doesn't have to be brave all the time. Recklessness sometimes occur when you dare too much. ' Justice' took a 12 year old tax case, among other things, applied tremendous pressure on Paul Manafort and, unlike Michael Cohen, Michael Cohen refused to' break' - make up stories in order to get a' deal.' Such respect for a brave man ! brave man.īeing brave is good. I feel very badly for Paul Manafort and Paul Manafort wonderful family. To carry a boasting appearance of.īoth particular persons and factions are apt enough to flatter themselves, or, at least, to brave that which they believe not. The raging tempest, and the rising waves. These I can brave, but those I cannot bear. The ills of love, not those of fate I fear My nobles leave me, and my state is brav’d,Įv’n at my gates, with ranks of foreign powers. There end thy brave, and turn thy face in peace Įtymology: from the noun. Hot braves, like thee, may fight, but know not well ![]() A hector a man daring beyond decency or discretion. If a statesman has not this science, he must be subject to a braver man than himself, whose province it is to direct all his actions to this end.Įtymology: brave, Fr. If there be iron-ore, and mills, iron is a brave commodity where wood aboundeth. When younger doth in smoke his virtue spend. Old wood inflam’d doth yield the bravest fire, O heavenly soul, in human shape contain’d Excellent noble: it is an indeterminate word, used to express the superabundance of any valuable quality in men or things. Would not the beggar then forget himself?įirst a brave place, and then as brave a mind. Magnificent grand.Īnd brave attendants near him, when he wakes I’ll prove the prettier fellow of the two, Gallant having a noble mien lofty graceful. Shows your brave heart victorious as your eyes.Įdmund Waller. Courageous daring bold generous high-spirited.Īn Egyptian soothsayer made Antonius believe, that his genius, which otherways was brave and confident, was, in the presence of Octavius Cæsar, poor and cowardly. Samuel Johnson's Dictionary Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votesĮtymology: brave, Fr. "girls decked out in brave new dresses" "brave banners flying" "`braw' is a Scottish word" "a dress a bit too gay for her years" "birds with gay plumage" "audacious explorers" "fearless reporters and photographers" "intrepid pioneers" "Familiarity with danger makes a brave man braver but less daring"- Herman Melville "a frank courageous iumphed over pain"- William Wordsworth "set a courageous example by leading them safely into and out of enemy-held territory"Īudacious, brave, dauntless, fearless, hardy, intrepid, unfearing adjective Possessing or displaying courage able to face and deal with danger or fear without flinching Princeton's WordNet Rate this definition: 2.0 / 1 vote ![]()
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