Masato Hatayama
What does the phrase "I would venture to say that..." mean? In "The More of Less", the book I'm reading now, I encounter this sentence below: "I would venture to say that most of us already own more than we need." From the meaning of "venture", I guess the author try to say something risky or counter-intuitive. Am I right?
22 mrt. 2017 05:45
Antwoorden · 4
1
"Venture" in used herein the sense of "dare/be brave," rather than sense of "gamble/risk." When you venture to say something, you are being bold enough to say it. Usually, it's an opinion - "May I venture to say how beautiful you look tonight?" - but not always. "I venture to say" would probably be an overly formal wording for telling your boss's boss that he has a piece of toilet paper stuck to his shoe, but that would be a fact that it might take a lot of courage to state.
22 maart 2017
1
Yes. The risk is that he is stating an opinion without any evidence.
22 maart 2017
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!