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Discover LudwigThe phrase "brazen to" is correct and can be used in written English.
It means to behave or act in a bold, shameless or daring manner. Example: The student was brazen to challenge the teacher's authority in front of the entire class.
Exact(13)
It seemed so brazen to have made an object that took up room in the world.
"It's unbelievable that Pheu Thai is so brazen to do this".
But Thomas, believing his own press clippings, was too brazen to see it.
Was it too brazen to look them directly in the eye?
I'd like to think I have managed to balance my family's pendulum swings from brazen to strait-laced.
Since 1996, Robert Olen Butler has gravitated more and more to this realm, but usually with mixed results, veering from the brazen to the strained to the tastelessly morbid.
Similar(45)
Not surprisingly, the justices' brazen willingness to get to the heart of the political issue took both counsellors aback.
No kid would be so brazen as to try to smoke a cigarette in the middle of a math lesson.
And Patrick Byrne isn't the only CEO brazen enough to resort to sock puppetry.
Bruce said we need the warped to be brazen enough to point out society's most glaring and flawed beliefs.
Hussein's claims to Pan-Arab leadership is but a brazen effort to give legitimacy to a government that has none.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com