Reverse Dictionary: ADVENTURE

ADJECTIVES
1532 TEMERARIOUS unreasonably adventurous; reckless, heedless, careless, rash, bold, headstrong → literary usage
1576 VENTURABLE adventurable; attemptable; venturous, hazardous → obs.
1595 ICARIAN adventurous, soaring; said of ambitious or presumptuous acts which end in failure or ruin 
1605 DAREFUL adventurous, full of daring or defiance → obs.
1640 VENTORIOUS adventurous, characterized by venturesomeness; bold, daring → obs.
1693 SWASHBUCKLING adventurous, flamboyant, swaggering
1832 ADVENTUREFUL ready for adventure, enterprising 
1898 AUNTERSOME adventurous, bold, daring → Eng. dial. (Bk.)


ADVERBS
1435 ADVENTURELY adventurously, daringly → obs.


NOUNS
1584PERADVENTURE an adventure → arch.
1616 — ADVENTRY an adventure; an enterprise or undertaking → obs.
1698 — HIGH-FLYER a daring or bold adventurer → sl.
1810 — VENTURE an adventure or remarkable feat, incident, etc. 
1865 — SANTER an adventure; an idle tale → Eng. dial.
1881 — ANTER → AUNTER an adventure, a misadventure; a story of adventure, an unlikely story → Eng. dial.
1890 — CAPTAIN a travelling title adopted by adventurers who have no other good enough → sl. (Bk.)
1891 CONTE a short adventure story
1894 — RURITANIA a state or country seen as a setting for romantic adventure and intrigue 
..20C — HAIR-RAISER an exciting or terrifying adventure story or film → sl.
1942 — BADVENTURE a bad adventure → Amer. sl. (Bk.)
1990 — ONE an adventure, a time, a spree → sl.


NOUNS, PERSON
1377 LAND-LEAPER an adventurer, a land-loper → obs.
1500 LAND-LOPER → LAND-LOUPER an adventurer; a renegade; one who runs up and down the land → chiefly Sc.
1530 VENTURER an adventurer, one who ventures 
1562 VENTURELING a young or petty adventurer → obs.
1615 LADY ERRANT a woman who travels in search of adventure → humorous usage
1622 PICARO an adventurer or rogue; a scoundrel 
1754 ADVENTURESS a female adventurer; a woman on the lookout for a position 
..17C — PICARA a female adventurer 
..17C — PICAROON → PICKAROON an adventurer or rogue → arch.
1834 BEAU SABREUR a handsome or dashing adventurer; a fine soldier 
1834 MUNCHAUSEN an inventor of extravagantly untruthful pseudo-autobiographical stories of amazing adventure and prowess 
1881 ARGONAUT an adventurer who went to California in 1849; a forty-niner → Eng. dial.
1883 GENTLEMAN OF FORTUNE an adventurer; a pirate 
1935 — RURITANIAN a person associated with romantic adventure and intrigue 
1950 JACK IN THE BEAN STACK an adventurous, daredevil person → African-American sl.


PHRASES
1579 I WILL EITHER WIN THE SADDLE OR LOSE THE HORSE said by one engaging in an adventure of which the issue will be either highly profitable or ruinous 


VERBS
1902 — FIGHT ONE’S BATTLES OVER AGAIN to recall old adventures (Bk.)