0 a new activity that may not be successful -- przedsięwzięcie
a business venture
1 to leave a safe place and go somewhere that may involve risks -- odważyć się wejść/wyjść itp.
2 to be brave enough to say something that might be criticized -- zaryzykować, odważyć się, ośmielić się
If the social norms hinder women from venturing into public places such as markets, cashin-hand may actually be less useful than help in kind.
Of course these moments are a crucial aspect of our delight, and can be a rich source for interpretative ventures.
At the other, the literal level exists merely as a pro-forma excuse for a venture whose point resides in the second meaning.
One values being trusted oneself, merely because one wants to be included in co-operative ventures on terms that are advantageous.
Under the stimulus of quantum mechanics, the independent discoverers were each venturing into what turned out to be new territory for both disciplines.
For, serious doubts may be raised about the viability of the doxastic venture model.
She is spatially bound in her leisure activities and seldom ventures to unfamiliar places by herself.
Indeed, they could have been even more ambitious and ventured further into the territory of development beyond the age of four years.