0 to be brave enough to do something difficult or dangerous, or to be rude or silly enough to do something that you have no right to do: --
[ + to infinitive ] He was under attack for daring to criticize the mayor.
I'd never dare (to) talk to my mother the way Brandon talks to his.
[ + infinitive without to ] I wouldn't dare have a party in my flat in case the neighbours complained.
[ + (to) infinitive ] Everyone in the office complains that he smells awful, but nobody dares (to) mention it to him.
I was going to ask if his dog was better, but I didn't dare in case she had died.
2 something you do because someone dares you to: --
3 to be brave enough to do something difficult or dangerous or that you should not do: --
5 something difficult or dangerous that you do because someone asks you to do it: --
He formulated the project of composing some; he dared to be a creator.
Ultimately the two societies, through confrontation and co-operation, remained more closely entwined than either would have cared or dared to admit.
The upshot is that anyone who dares to question any item in these tables has to redo the entire research for themselves.
I dare say specialists in other fields could find aspects to pick on too.
He brings in the nation-state, national literatures, the debts to revolutions and the shared, daring belief in progress.
Until very recently, indirect communication about 'the love that dares not speak its name' has been normative in most settings.
There are still small differences both between models and variables, so one would not dare to draw any conclusion, if the two patterns were close.
Without knowing more about the particulars -for instance, about engineers'concepts of pendulums - one cannot dare to give a definitive answer in this case.