pl. durron, durran;
p. dorste,
pl. dorston, dorstan;
pp. dorren
To DARE,
presume; audēre :-- Ne dear ic hám faran
I dare not go home, Gen. 44, 34: Ex. 32, 30: Cd. 40; Th. 54, 1; Gen. 870. Gif ðú Grendles dearst neán bídan
if thou darest abide near Grendel, Beo. Th. 1059; B. 527: Andr. Kmbl. 2700; An. 1352. Gif he gesécean dear
if he dares to seek, Beo. Th. 1373; B. 684. Ne durran we ówér geféran
we dare not go anywhere, Exon. 70 b; Th. 262, 10; Jul. 330. Hí durron, Bd. 1, 27; S. 491, 33. Hwæðer ðú durre gilpan
whether thou dare boast, Bt. 14, 1; Fox 40, 22: Bt. Met. Fox 11, 107; Met. 11, 54. Séc gif ðú dyrre
seek it if thou durst, Beo. Th. 2763; B. 1379. Hwæðer he winnan dorste
whether he durst fight, Ors. 4, 11; Bos. 97, 14: Cd. 121; Th. 156, 15; Gen. 2589. Hí dorston, Beo. Th. 5688; B. 2848: dorstan, Bd. 3, 11; S. 536, 41. Gif hí dorsten
if they durst, Bt. Met. Fox 1, 54; Met. 1, 27. [Durran is the fourth of the twelve Anglo-Saxon verbs, called
præterito-præsentia, and given under ágan,
q. v. The
inf. durran and the
pres. dear,
pl. durron, retaining preterite inflections, are taken from the
p. of the verb, ascertained from dear,
pl. durron, which shews the ablaut or internal change of the vowel in the
p. tense of the twelfth class of Grimm's division of strong verbs [Grm. i. p. 898; Koch, i. p. 252], and requires by analogy with other verbs of the same class the
inf. deorran = deorsan [
Goth. daursan] and the
pp. dorren. Thus we find the original verb deorran = deorsan;
p. dear,
pl. durron;
pp. dorren. The weak
p. dorste,
pl. dorston [ = durste, durston], is formed regularly from the
inf. durran = dursan. The same
præterito-præsens may be generally observed in the following cognate words :--
| inf. | pres. | pl. | p. |
| Engl. | dare, | dare, | dare, | durst, |
| Wyc. | dore, | dar, | durn, | |
| Laym. Orm | | der, darr, | durren, | durste, |
| O. Sax. | gi-durran, | gi-dar, | | gi-dorsta, |
| O. Frs. | thura, | thur, dur | thuron, | thorste, |
| M. H. Ger. | turren, | tar, | turren, | torste, |
| O. H. Ger. | turran, | tar, | turrumés, | torsta, |
| Goth. | daursan, | dars, | daursum, | daursta.] |
durran