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Courage Very Common

Origin: French suffix -age

Courage has 3 different meanings across 1 category:

Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

a quality of spirit that enables you to face danger or pain without showing fear

"The firefighter showed immense courage by rushing into the burning building to save the trapped cat without hesitation."

2

The quality of being confident, not afraid or easily intimidated, but without being incautious or inconsiderate.

"The firefighter displayed true courage by calmly guiding survivors out of the burning building despite the intense heat and smoke."

In plain English: Courage is being brave enough to do what you know is right even when you are scared.

"She showed great courage when she stood up to her bully in front of everyone."

Usage: Courage is the ability to act despite fear rather than simply lacking it entirely. Use this word when describing someone who faces danger or difficulty with confidence while still exercising good judgment.

Verb
1

To encourage.

"The coach's words gave courage to the nervous players before the final match."

Example Sentences
"She showed great courage when she stood up to her bully in front of everyone." noun
"She showed great courage when she stood up to the bully." noun
"It took immense courage for him to leave his safe job and start over." noun
"The team played with courage even though they were losing by ten points." noun
Related Terms
Antonyms
cowardliness
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
spirit
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
heart heroism dauntlessness Dutch courage stoutheartedness fearlessness fortitude

Origin

The word courage comes from the Latin word for "heart." It originally referred to the physical organ before taking on its current meaning of bravery.

Rhyming Words
age sage tage rage wage aage mage yage lage cage gage page nage kage swage adage plage brage phage stage
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