audacious
IPA: ɑdˈeɪʃʌs
adjective
- Showing willingness to take bold risks; recklessly daring.
- Impudent, insolent.
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Examples of "audacious" in Sentences
- The affair was ruled as an audacious hoax.
- That was such an audacious thing to do at the time.
- Obama has been called audacious, and he certainly is.
- The architectural effect is audacious and picturesque.
- They mix many different styles in an audacious fashion.
- The metaphor of drawing a bullseye is however audacious.
- The proceeding of Epiphanius of Salamis is more audacious.
- Yudi is furious at the audacious arrogance of this stranger.
- Boko Haram has become insolently audacious and resolutely bold.
- Audacious claims like this need the backing of a scholarly source.
- The color is bold and audacious, so it usually dilutes the colors around it.
- To address this set of challenges we will need bold - even 'audacious' - policies.
- He is part of what some here are calling an audacious solution to a massive problem: the budget deficit.
- I have used the term audacious in speaking of Delacroix, and circumstances forced him to justify the epithet.
- Having, however, both taken and paid for my passage, and committed what old maids and sailors would call the audacious folly of starting upon a
- O'Scannlain chided Judges Canby and Fisher for issuing an order he called an "audacious ruling" and said the judges lacked the authority to make such demands of prosecutors.
- Well, she certainly, as well, and maybe a lot of us could make the parallels to another young black politician who people are calling audacious these days, who just might become the first black president -- Don.
- Under the terms of his plea deal, Syume has agreed to cooperate with authorities investigating what prosecutors have described as an audacious and long-running scheme that has led to charges against 40 people, including a top staffer on the D.C. Council.