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Daunt   /dɔnt/   Listen
Daunt

verb
(past & past part. daunted; pres. part. daunting)
1.
Cause to lose courage.  Synonyms: dash, frighten away, frighten off, pall, scare, scare away, scare off.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Daunt" Quotes from Famous Books



... after magazine. Before she could fire a shot in answer, she blew up abaft. Ringrose from the canoa "saw his men blown up, that were abaft the mast, some of them falling on the deck, and others into the sea." But even this disaster did not daunt old Peralta. Like a gallant sea-captain, he slung a bowline round his waist, and went over the side, burnt as he was, to pick up the men who had been blown overboard. The pirates fired at him in the water, but the bullets missed him. He regained his ship, and the fight went on. While the ...
— On the Spanish Main - Or, Some English forays on the Isthmus of Darien. • John Masefield

... myself against the sharks which abound on the coast. I was ready to run all risks. I had become desperate. I felt sure that if I were observed by the natives I should be brought back and slaughtered. Still that idea did not daunt me. At every hazard I was resolved to get on board, or ...
— Old Jack • W.H.G. Kingston

... tomahawk in my right, did not wait for the attack, but rushed upon the foremost Indian, for I knew that my only chance of success lay in the killing or disabling of one before his comrade could come up. At the same time, both to apprise Waunangee of my position, and to daunt my adversaries, I uttered one of these tremendous yells, you know I so well can imitate, and receiving the blow of his tomahawk upon my own, thrown up in true military guard, plunged my knife into ...
— Hardscrabble - The Fall of Chicago: A Tale of Indian Warfare • John Richardson

... whose happy noble hart, No dole can daunt, nor fearful force affright, Whose chereful voice, doth comfort saddest wights, When she hir self, hath little cause to sing, Whom lovers love, bicause she plaines their greves, She wraies their woes, and yet relieves ...
— The Principles of English Versification • Paull Franklin Baum

... of the experiment, together with the recorded conversations, had gone to the newspaper office to carry his material to the press. Hence he was not at the Exeter Place rooms when the jubilant Watson arrived. But the early morning hour did not daunt the young electrician; and when, after some delay, Mr. Bell came in, the two men rushed toward one another and regardless of everything else executed what Mr. Watson has since characterized as a war dance. Certainly they ...
— Ted and the Telephone • Sara Ware Bassett


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