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to bolder
adjective
Courageous, daring.
Exact(17)
Ideally too, the instrumental colours need to bolder, less integrated into a homogeneous texture.
The focus of the protests has also started to broaden, from anger at corrupt officials to bolder expressions of dissatisfaction with King Abdullah II.
This may protect it from the punishment of higher temperatures and allow it to preserve its stylistic range, from crisp and fruity to bolder and rounder.
But political commentator Li Datong suggests this "double background" has proved genuinely formative for princelings such as Xi and might even lead them to bolder policy-making.
Kim reckons that it has a lot to do with the recession: "From personal observation and talking to customers, I'd say the move to bolder, brighter home décor is totally down to people not being able to afford to move.
Music is like sports; the improvising musician faces a special vulnerability in public, and one of the crucial improvisers of modern times, Miles Davis, rose to bolder heights in concert than he did in the studio.
Similar(40)
We ought to be bolder.
Mr Calderón can afford to be bolder.
It may yet have to be bolder.
Labour can afford to be bolder.
Maybe they used to be bolder.
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