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View synonyms for

daresay

or dare say

[ dair-sey ]

verb (used with or without object)

  1. to venture to say (something); assume (something) as probable (used only in present sing. 1st person):

    I daresay we will soon finish.



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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of daresay1

1250–1300; Middle English dar sayen I dare to say
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

I daresay they find it infuriating.

From

I daresay we know more about the Beatles than any other pop band in history — their music, their less than private private lives, their fab gear, where they were and what they were doing nearly every day of their eventful career.

From

I daresay watermelon is summer’s most darling melon.

From

“When the villain has motivation, a mission, an ego, when there’s a humanity inside there, even though Maestro is objectively pretty evil, they believe in what they’re doing. There’s a layer of, I daresay, an inferiority complex derived from daddy issues.â€

From

“I daresay it will be business as usual, because he’s been cut of the same cloth as Mark Drakeford,†Welsh Conservative leader Andrew R.T.

From

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