Dictionary
is temerity
noun
Reckless boldness; foolish bravery.
Exact(1)
Good design is temerity, the brazen decision to put a chrome end table beside a Louis XVI chair, the submission to a life-size ceramic Labrador.
Similar(57)
"It could be temerity: I'm a big fish in my own pond and if I went somewhere else maybe I'd fail, or I wouldn't like it.
Slightly tamer is Deep Temerity, a 180-acre bowl that opened last year and gives expert skiers an additional 1,000-foot 1,000-foot
Where is the temerity we saw when he campaigned?" Readers cited the health care reform bill as a let-down - "a windfall for private insurers at the end of the day," writes Abraxas79.
The temerity is what Walsh and D'Antoni like most about Gallinari.
She wrote as if no one had come before her -- no one, that is, with sufficient temerity to expose the evil perpetrated in the name of parenthood -- and peppered her books with fulsome letters paying her homage.
Obviously the real reason for the EU temerity is the fact that countries such as Germany and Italy are under considerable pressure from industrial lobby groups who know well that a move to a higher target will result in tighter caps on their emissions.
But, you see, the price of my -- our -- temerity is about to be collected.
My guess is that their gutsy temerity tugs at the latent daredevil in us all.
Some congressmen are now preparing bills that would punish the Palestinians for their temerity.This is barmy.
"When someone purposely buries something to maintain secrecy, and they do it with such temerity, there is nothing," he said stopping short.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com