"court death" is a correct and usable phrase in written English. It is an idiom which means to deliberately do something that is very dangerous or that might lead to death. For example, "He courted death by going skydiving without a professional instructor."
To court Haiti was to court death.
But I don't court death.
Or maybe you're one of those "adrenaline junkies" looking for another freakish way to court death.
In recent years, more than half of all state court death sentences have been overturned by Federal courts during habeas corpus proceedings.
Like the owners of guns, the consumers of cigarettes are so attached to their cylindrical objects of desire that they are willing to court death for them.
"To travel is to court death and greatness," writes Okorafor-Mbachu, an American whose parents moved to the United States from Nigeria.
We were high, but we weren't courting death.
I was courting death or at least a kidnapping.
His enemies thought him a charlatan who deliberately courted death.
Courting Death illuminates both the promise and pitfalls of constitutional regulation of contentious social issues.
Except for the fact that, of course, you're courting death in the process.
Awesome tool! I started using it one year ago and I never had to look for another app
Ha Thuy Vy
MA of Applied Linguistic, Maquarie University, Australia