The word dauntless is perfecty English - half French and half German. It was formed in the Middle English period. The first element is daunt, "to intimidate," which comes through Old French from domitare, the Latin for "to tame." The second element, -less, is from an old Germanic word (-los in Modern German) meaning loose, unconnected, hence "without."
Dauntless is an adjective, and it means Fearless, or Without Fear
The bank robber was known for his bold and dauntless manner.
The Irish 'smidirin', a diminutive of 'smiodar', meaning fragment, circa 1829.
it derives from the Greek word for Mouth (Stoma) therefore Stomata is the plural
There is an Egyptian Arabic connection from the word 'lufah' Known as a 'flesh brush'
Dauntless is an adjective, and it means Fearless, or Without Fear
Harold the Dauntless was created in 1817.
They are known to be originate from aryans and the language from which Hindi originate is Devnagri
The bank robber was known for his bold and dauntless manner.
The bully claims to be dauntless because all the freshman fear him. He was fearless, intrepid and bold; you could even say he was dauntless.
no one really knows why language was originated
He was fearless, intrepid and bold; you could even say he was dauntless.
hebrew
Chinook
Spanish
French
The bully swore he was dauntless so all the freshmen would fear him.