dare vs go round

dare

verb
  • To defy or challenge (someone to do something) 

  • To terrify; to daunt. 

  • To have enough courage (to do something). 

  • To have enough courage to meet or do something, go somewhere, etc.; to face up to 

  • To catch (larks) by producing terror through the use of mirrors, scarlet cloth, a hawk, etc., so that they lie still till a net is thrown over them. 

noun
  • The quality of daring; venturesomeness; boldness. 

  • A challenge to prove courage. 

  • In the game truth or dare, the choice to perform a dare set by the other players. 

  • A small fish, the dace 

  • Defiance; challenge. 

go round

verb
  • To circumvent or to outmanoeuvre someone. 

  • To rotate, to move in a circle. 

  • To be sufficient to be shared, to be enough for everyone. 

  • To go around the side of sth., to bypass something. 

  • To go to another person's home or a public event. 

  • To circulate, to move aimlessly but ghostly (threateningly and invisibly). 

  • To physically swirl or rotate. 

  • To evade sth. 

  • To pass around, to circulate sth. 

  • To live behaving in a certain way, doing something regularly (followed by specification) 

How often have the words dare and go round occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )