visnerātnākais (definite nerātnais, comparative nerātnāks, adverb visnerātnāk) the naughtiest, the most mischievous, the <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span>; superlative degree of nerātns...
(definite draiskais, comparative draiskāks, adverb visdraiskāk) the most playful, the <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span>, the least well-behaved; superlative degree of draisks...
visdraiskāk most playful, <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span>, least well-behaved, most playfully, most boldly; adverbial form of visdraiskākais...
visnerātnāk naughtiest, most mischievous, <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span>, most naughtily, most mischievously, most boldly; adverbial form of visnerātnākais...
alderstoutst (obsolete) From aller- + stoutst. allerstoutst (not comparable) naughtiest or most mischievous of all (archaic) <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span> of all...
as to conquer. 1867, William T. Butler, “The Gathering On the Plains”, in Harper's Magazine: E'en nature's <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span> barriers he conqueringly assails....
past participle outslanged) (transitive) To surpass in slang. 1848, William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair: he could outslang the <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span> bargeman...
degree of جَرِيء (jarīʔ): bolder, more daring, braver, more courageous; <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span>, most daring, bravest, most courageous Steingass, Francis Joseph (1884)...
New York galleries are in the habit of saving their best — their newest, <span class="searchmatch">boldest</span>, oddest — for last, for the annual blitz of end-of-season group shows that...