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27 Sentences With "live dangerously"

How to use live dangerously in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "live dangerously" and check conjugation/comparative form for "live dangerously". Mastering all the usages of "live dangerously" from sentence examples published by news publications.

If you like to live dangerously, set texts to automatically delete.
Lots of people are willing to live dangerously to save a few bucks.
We live dangerously close to a bubble tea chain, so we bundle up and make the short trek.
It was a tough decision to make, but I did it because I'm courageous, bold, and live dangerously.
Or, if you really love to live dangerously, you might opt to go without healthcare coverage at all.
But you have to live dangerously sometimes, and I'm doing so by picking Spain's archrival to win it all.
Take your pick: Grab several 32- or 64-gigabyte cards, or live dangerously and invest in a single 1-terabyte.
I decided to live dangerously and order one of the menu's most decadent items, the Burgernut, as a shared appetizer, cut into four pieces.
In south Texas, residential communities are often built on top of bayous, marshes and swamps, allowing alligators to live dangerously close to small children and pets.
America's obsession with money and power is predicated on some of us getting what we need, while many, many more live dangerously on the margins, or even die.
A sexy cartoon android living in some faraway, post-apocalyptic world is plagued by desperate loneliness and builds himself a sexy android girlfriend and they fight crime, disco dance, and live dangerously together.
Warwick Cairns (born 1962) is a British author. His three books include: How to Live Dangerously, About the Size of It, and In Praise of Savagery.
There, they get involved with wealthy Kim Ulander (Christopher Walken), an enigmatic businessman with quirky tendencies and a repressed desire to live dangerously. If they aren't careful, this daring duo may not come out of this deal alive.
"What Will I Do Without You?" is a song written especially for the album by Judge Smith. Another song written by him appears on the album, "You Can't Kill Me", which he had already written in 1972. It deals with reincarnation. "Angels" is a song dedicated to people who like to live dangerously.
William Paul Jenkins (known as Paul Jenkins) was born in 1923 in Kansas City, Missouri, where he was raised. He met Frank Lloyd Wright who was commissioned by the artist's great-uncle, the Rev. Burris Jenkins (whose own motto was to "live dangerously") to rebuild his church in Kansas City, Missouri after a fire.Machin, Julian.
Forever moving forward, always remembering > that it is the things of the spirit that in the end prevail. That caring > counts and that where there is no vision the people perish. That hope and > faith count and that without charity, there can be nothing good. That having > dared to live dangerously, and in believing in the inherent goodness of man, > we can stride forward into the unknown with growing confidence.
Gerardo De Oscar Gerardo De Oscar y Araujo (Born 5 February 1978) is an Uruguayan writer, essayist and theologian. Self-taught in humanist disciplines, he has written both stories and essays. His works are rich in narrative and dimensional parallel imaginary landscapes, as well as an interesting range of characters devoid of morals including true antiheroes, intense and willing to live dangerously. In creation, Oscar formed a non- existent universe, abstract and relative.
She tells Kees that within a couple of days Louis will provide Kees with fake papers so he can leave the country. Kees is suspicious enough to hide the money, in an abandoned car near the tracks, before Louis is able to search his effects. Bored with hiding out and tired of belittling remarks about his status, he decides to "live dangerously" and takes Michele out on the town. She seems to warm to him and he is seduced into trusting her.
The film is about 24-year-old Kristoffer (Nicolai Cleve Broch), who lives in Tøyen in Oslo with his friends Geir (Aksel Hennie) and Stig Inge (Anders Baasmo Christiansen). Geir likes to live dangerously, while Stig is a more cautious and uncertain type. Kristoffer and Geir work as billboard hangers, and in his spare time Kristoffer makes a video diary with Geir and Stig, containing stunts of a Jackass-nature. When Kristoffer's girlfriend, Elisabeth (Janne Formoe), leaves him, his life seems to fall to pieces.
After retiring from professional wrestling due to a back injury, Sam DeCero decided to establish Windy City Wrestling (WCW) and began training local wrestlers advertising as far as Hammond, Indiana. Within a year, he held the promotions first event at a South Side nightspot featuring Steve Regal against Paul Christy in the main event on January 30, 1988. The event, which was attended by 160 people, was successful. DeCero soon began running televised wrestling events with then-22-year-old Paul Heyman,"Paul E. is managing to live Dangerously".
The most frequently-quoted statistic in How to Live Dangerously is described thus by Steven Pinker: "The writer Warwick Cairns calculated that if you wanted your child to be kidnapped and held overnight by a stranger, you'd have to leave the child outside and unattended for 750,000 years unless you live in Detroit." His third book, In Praise of Savagery, tells the story of a 1930s expedition by the British explorer Wilfred Thesiger, and a journey to meet him in a mud hut in Africa towards the end of his life.
Cairns was born in Dagenham, Essex, England. He was educated in English and psychology at Keele University in England and English at Yale University in the United States, where he studied under Professor Harold Bloom. His first book, About the Size of It (Pan Macmillan, 2007) championed the cause of traditional systems of measurement. His second, How to Live Dangerously (Pan Macmillan, 2008 and St. Martin's Press, 2009) criticised the excessive concern with 'Health & Safety' throughout much of the industrialised world and argued that it is necessary to embrace risk to live life to the full.
Sarll's journey down to South Africa was where he met members of his soon to be new regiment, including Joe Lyons who had been a scout with Buffalo Bill and claimed to be an escort for Pony Post during the American Indian Wars. Sarll arrived in South Africa and joined the South African Light Horse, a cavalry regiment with one of the officers being Winston Churchill and under the command of the General Sir Redvers Buller. Sarll earned his nickname 'Tiger' after members of his regiment remarked that he made a cross between a snarl and a growl before entering battle. He also became known for his motto 'Live dangerously.
Jack Fenelli was unsupportive of his daughter dating Rick, who tended to live dangerously; in protest, Rick and Ryan ultimately fled to South Carolina in April 1986, where they eloped. Ryan was approached and assisted at the town hall ceremony by a woman named Maura (Kate Mulgrew), who bore more than a passing resemblance to Ryan's late mother, Mary (it was suggested that this was Mary returning yet again in ghostly form). The two were followed and then found by Jack and Frank after the wedding and brought back home, and while Rick and Ryan moved in together, things became more rocky between Ryan and her family. Later in 1985, Jadrien Steele departed from the role of 10-year-old Johnno Ryan.
She was in exhibitions such as the "Live Dangerously" exhibition at the National Museum for Women in the Arts, the Platform section (large scale works) of the 25th Armory Show 2019, "Xaviera Simmons: Sundown" at David Castillo Gallery, in "When Home Won't Let You Stay" at the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston. She is outspoken in the art world beyond her visual practice, writing a critical comment article for The Art Newspaper entitled "Whiteness must undo itself to make way for the truly radical turn in contemporary culture" and pulling out as a panelist at a New Museum festival when local Bronx organizers shut it down with their concerns. Her article was quoted (with her permission) in artist William Powhida's first solo art exhibition in five years at Postmasters Gallery.
Habit then is the generic term for > the countless treaties concluded between the countless subjects that > constitute the individual and their countless correlative objects. The > periods of transition that separate consecutive adaptations (because by no > expedient of macabre transubstantiation can the grave-sheets serve as > swaddling-clothes) represent the perilous zones in the life of the > individual, dangerous, precarious, painful, mysterious and fertile, when for > a moment the boredom of living is replaced by the suffering of being. (At > this point, and with a heavy heart and for the satisfaction or > disgruntlement of Gideans, semi and integral, I am inspired to concede a > brief parenthesis to all the analogivorous, who are capable of interpreting > the ‘Live dangerously,’ that victorious hiccough in vacuo, as the national > anthem of the true ego exiled in habit. The Gideans advocate a habit of > living—and look for an epithet.
However, these attempts to gain popular support from the public failed, and rebellions and violent protests became so intense that many observers believed that the young Kingdom of Italy would not survive. Tired of the internal conflicts in Italy, a movement of bourgeois intellectuals led by Gabriele d'Annunzio, Gaetano Mosca, and Vilfredo Pareto declared war on the parliamentary system, and their position gained respect among Italians. D'Annunzio called upon young Italians to seek fulfillment in violent action and put an end to the politically maneuvering parliamentary government. The Italian Nationalist Association (ANI) was founded in Florence in 1910 by the jingoist nationalist Enrico Corradini who emphasized the need for martial heroism, of total sacrifice of individualism and equality to one's nation, the need of discipline and obedience in society, the grandeur and power of ancient Rome, and the need for people to live dangerously.

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