Bravery in a sentence as a noun

Well, then I may consider these things if I still have the bravery to be part of such a protest.

I respect and admire her courage and bravery to do what's right, in light of her career.

I do commend the bravery and spirit, but I'm strongly against including kids in it.

It's not like you're the one who committed those acts of bravery and sacrifice. If you can't deal with the shameful aspects of our history, you have no right to celebrate the good stuff.

I applaud the guardian for their bravery and excellence in reporting.

It harks back to the days when male adolescents would have to commit some act of skill and/or bravery to be considered adults. Writing it as "women from the girls" seems forced and clumsy.

I am blown away by the bravery, I know I'd never be so bold. Also confused why he didn't end up in prison on mysterious "pervert" charges out of the blue or even dead.

I'd say this is the perfect moment for Mr. Stewart's reputed bravery, independence and courage.

I respect Richard more; the degree to which he doesn't compromise takes more bravery than it looks, IMO. He could have taken the easy way out, and been handsomely rewarded for it, long ago.

Traits like self assurance, confidence, pride, and bravery. You might be afraid that Hitler is going to cross the channel, but you are going to put on a hard face and proudly declare that the RAF will continue to kick *** and take names.

It takes a lot of bravery to put yourself out there in public. It should take just as much class to offer advice and constructive criticism instead of tearing somebody else's work down.

I'm glad I get to explain how hard work, engineering, bravery, a very talented team and a little bit of individual craziness can do some amazing things. For me this was special to watch.

The integrity and bravery he has shown in this fight is impressive. He has definitely earned enough "cred" to restart this business outside the US and be very successful.

Org/wiki/Laurel_Clark Language has power, and using "men" in this context makes invisible the contributions and bravery of these women and others like them. Sorry to seem PC, but it's important to get this stuff right if we want our kids to grow up in a better world.

Fortunately for us, he had the self-awareness, conscience and bravery to take the blinkers off, question what is happening and try and do something about it.

I think the only time it takes bravery to see gray areas is when everybody else sees black and white. Otherwise, the "ability" to see gray helps you paper over disagreements and maintain valuable relationships with people.

I cannot imagine the bravery. Going to war overseas with a weapon at the behest of "leaders" pales in comparison to going into a mob unarmed to try to make a change in rights, knowing there is a really good chance you are going to be beaten to death without witness.

You don't get to prove your bravery by firing into a group of innocent students from a rival high school. You don't take psychologically troubled individuals to the firing range for therapy and teach them to be efficient killing machines.

All tyrants will fall, and thanks to your bravery Bashar Al-Assad is next. To the Syrian military: You are responsible for protecting the Syrian people, and anyone who orders you to **** women, children, and the elderly deserves to be tried for treason.

I'm grateful to both of them for their bravery, and willingness to try and help, but maintaining it has been such a hard task. A balance between maintaining compatibility, and not breaking people's production environments, and pushing the tool forwards, and improving it.

If their bravery had caused a proper response, similar to how Norway responded to that mass-shooting, then it'd be worthwhile to note. But despite their bravery, that "garden-variety terrorist" has succeeded in scaring people into allowing their government to expand powers.

The thing I love about him is he truly embodies the bravery that goes along with the idea that it's better to live in a free society with a modest threat of terror attacks than to live in an oppressive society where we are supposedly kept "safe" from the terrorists hiding behind every corner. It takes courage to make such an assertion.

Your imagination is a powerful tool which can do a complete hatchet job on the person you deep down don't want to be but seems appealing in the short term, and it can be PR god to the version you aspire to be but somehow don't have the bravery and force of will to become. When you do that, and get these images in your head with enough detail that they seem real, it bleeds into reality and pushes you to becoming one over the other.

Pardon me if I'm being too cynical or if I'm missing the point, but all I see is a CEO saying that young employees should work more for lower wages, with some naturalistic, late XIX century imagery of bravery fighting in a war, the most desperate people, bringing out the beast, horses running wild.

Bravery definitions

noun

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

See also: courage courageousness braveness

noun

feeling no fear

See also: fearlessness