Can we use “dare” in this way?












11
















How dared you speak to me like that?




Is this a correct way to use "dare"? Shouldn't we say?




How dare you speak to me like that?











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    11
















    How dared you speak to me like that?




    Is this a correct way to use "dare"? Shouldn't we say?




    How dare you speak to me like that?











    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    Arthur Hmayakyan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      11












      11








      11


      4







      How dared you speak to me like that?




      Is this a correct way to use "dare"? Shouldn't we say?




      How dare you speak to me like that?











      share|improve this question







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      How dared you speak to me like that?




      Is this a correct way to use "dare"? Shouldn't we say?




      How dare you speak to me like that?








      grammar






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      asked 10 hours ago









      Arthur HmayakyanArthur Hmayakyan

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      New contributor




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          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          9














          Dare is sometimes called a semi-modal verb, because it sometimes patterns like a modal, and sometimes like a normal verb.



          When it patterns like a modal, it takes inversion, and "not" negation, rather than do-support ("Dare you?" "I dare not").



          When it patterns like a normal verb, it takes do-support: ("He didn't dare go", "Do you dare pick it up?")



          Both forms are found, and are grammatical.



          Personally I am very happy with how dare you? and find how dared you? strange and awkward. But I observe in the iWeb corpus that how dared [pronoun] is slightly more common than how did [pronoun] dare.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

            – FumbleFingers
            10 hours ago











          • @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

            – Jason Bassford
            7 hours ago





















          6














          Technically speaking, if you were complaining about how someone had spoken to you in the past, you could reasonably use past tense dared.



          But idiomatically, the expression How dare you! [do/say something outrageous] is something of a "fixed expression / set phrase", and I suspect some people might have misgivings about modifying dare for tense like that. To my ear, it would be at least slightly more "natural" (though of course it can't be fully natural, given it's riffing of a "frozen form") to use...




          How could you dare speak to me like that! (using could as the past tense of can)




          But that's a fine point. For most purposes, OP's version (or indeed, How could you have dared...) wouldn't be noticed as either "incorrect" or "unusual".





          EDIT: Or perhaps not such a "fine point" after all. Here are some relevant searches in Google Books...




          How dare you say that! - 25,100 hits for the "idiomatic standard" present tense version
          How could you dare say that! - 211 hits
          How dared you say that! - 3 hits
          How did you dare say that! - 0 hits




          Note that I added the exclamation marks myself (GB doesn't do punctuation). Obviously, that could be followed by a clause (How dare you say that I'm fat!), but that would be the same for all variations, so the relative preferences should still be valid.






          share|improve this answer


























          • The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

            – Colin Fine
            9 hours ago













          • Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

            – V2Blast
            5 hours ago



















          1















          How dared you to speak to me like that?




          I have Grammarly installed, and as I type that sentence, it throws an error asking me to change from 'dared' to 'dare!' So yes, dare is common and soothing to our general knowledge of English!



          On the other hand, if you change the question into a statement or sentence, you'll understand that it's grammatical:




          You dared to speak to me like that




          So, it's just past tense.



          But 'How dare you...' is a way common in daily English. Check this -



          'dare' also serves as an auxiliary verb chiefly used in questions and negatives






          share|improve this answer































            -1














            The second is correct in the present, but if it was in the past, I would say




            How did you dare to speak to me like that?







            share|improve this answer































              -1














              "How dare you/he/she/they [do something (present tense)]" is a set expression conveying present anger that an action is being done, has just been done, or was done in the more distant past. The tense of 'dare' does not change, nor does the tense of the verb of the action being complained about.



              I come into my room. You have a glass in your hand. How dare you drink my whisky!



              You tell me that your brother called me a fool yesterday. How dare he say that!



              I recall that a politician, who I don't support, did a bad thing 20 years ago. How dare he do that!



              Although the expression is phrased like a question, it is not one. If we wish to know how someone found the courage to do a dangerous thing in the past, we would phrase the question conventionally. We might say "How did you dare to attack the gang of thugs, armed only with a stick?", or "How did he dare to enter the lion's cage, knowing it might kill him?"



              To express sorrow or anger that someone behaved badly, we could ask e.g. "How could you speak to my grandmother like that?"






              share|improve this answer































                -3















                How dared you to speak to me like that




                is fine. It refers to a past event.




                How dare you speak to me like that




                is fine. It refers to a current event.




                How dared you speak to me like that




                is just wrong. It scrambles the time markers in what is an idiomatic construction.



                EDIT: Weather Vane and I agree on the substance. And




                How did you dare to speak to me like that




                seems far more euphonious than "how dared you," but there is a perfectly acceptable past form of the verb "dare."






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1





                  I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                  – Colin Fine
                  10 hours ago













                • @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                  – FumbleFingers
                  10 hours ago











                Your Answer








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                6 Answers
                6






                active

                oldest

                votes








                6 Answers
                6






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                9














                Dare is sometimes called a semi-modal verb, because it sometimes patterns like a modal, and sometimes like a normal verb.



                When it patterns like a modal, it takes inversion, and "not" negation, rather than do-support ("Dare you?" "I dare not").



                When it patterns like a normal verb, it takes do-support: ("He didn't dare go", "Do you dare pick it up?")



                Both forms are found, and are grammatical.



                Personally I am very happy with how dare you? and find how dared you? strange and awkward. But I observe in the iWeb corpus that how dared [pronoun] is slightly more common than how did [pronoun] dare.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1





                  I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

                  – FumbleFingers
                  10 hours ago











                • @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

                  – Jason Bassford
                  7 hours ago


















                9














                Dare is sometimes called a semi-modal verb, because it sometimes patterns like a modal, and sometimes like a normal verb.



                When it patterns like a modal, it takes inversion, and "not" negation, rather than do-support ("Dare you?" "I dare not").



                When it patterns like a normal verb, it takes do-support: ("He didn't dare go", "Do you dare pick it up?")



                Both forms are found, and are grammatical.



                Personally I am very happy with how dare you? and find how dared you? strange and awkward. But I observe in the iWeb corpus that how dared [pronoun] is slightly more common than how did [pronoun] dare.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1





                  I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

                  – FumbleFingers
                  10 hours ago











                • @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

                  – Jason Bassford
                  7 hours ago
















                9












                9








                9







                Dare is sometimes called a semi-modal verb, because it sometimes patterns like a modal, and sometimes like a normal verb.



                When it patterns like a modal, it takes inversion, and "not" negation, rather than do-support ("Dare you?" "I dare not").



                When it patterns like a normal verb, it takes do-support: ("He didn't dare go", "Do you dare pick it up?")



                Both forms are found, and are grammatical.



                Personally I am very happy with how dare you? and find how dared you? strange and awkward. But I observe in the iWeb corpus that how dared [pronoun] is slightly more common than how did [pronoun] dare.






                share|improve this answer













                Dare is sometimes called a semi-modal verb, because it sometimes patterns like a modal, and sometimes like a normal verb.



                When it patterns like a modal, it takes inversion, and "not" negation, rather than do-support ("Dare you?" "I dare not").



                When it patterns like a normal verb, it takes do-support: ("He didn't dare go", "Do you dare pick it up?")



                Both forms are found, and are grammatical.



                Personally I am very happy with how dare you? and find how dared you? strange and awkward. But I observe in the iWeb corpus that how dared [pronoun] is slightly more common than how did [pronoun] dare.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 10 hours ago









                Colin FineColin Fine

                29k24156




                29k24156








                • 1





                  I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

                  – FumbleFingers
                  10 hours ago











                • @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

                  – Jason Bassford
                  7 hours ago
















                • 1





                  I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

                  – FumbleFingers
                  10 hours ago











                • @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

                  – Jason Bassford
                  7 hours ago










                1




                1





                I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

                – FumbleFingers
                10 hours ago





                I don't know about that "iWeb corpus", but my first thought was to introduce another modal (could) that would allow me to retain dare without inflection (precisely because How dare you! is a "set expression" nowadays). Perhaps iWeb could reinforce what I found from Google Books.

                – FumbleFingers
                10 hours ago













                @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

                – Jason Bassford
                7 hours ago







                @FumbleFingers Yes. For the past, I would definitely use How could you dare to speak to me like that? (What's funny is I was in the middle of commenting to this effect, when I looked up and saw your comment.)

                – Jason Bassford
                7 hours ago















                6














                Technically speaking, if you were complaining about how someone had spoken to you in the past, you could reasonably use past tense dared.



                But idiomatically, the expression How dare you! [do/say something outrageous] is something of a "fixed expression / set phrase", and I suspect some people might have misgivings about modifying dare for tense like that. To my ear, it would be at least slightly more "natural" (though of course it can't be fully natural, given it's riffing of a "frozen form") to use...




                How could you dare speak to me like that! (using could as the past tense of can)




                But that's a fine point. For most purposes, OP's version (or indeed, How could you have dared...) wouldn't be noticed as either "incorrect" or "unusual".





                EDIT: Or perhaps not such a "fine point" after all. Here are some relevant searches in Google Books...




                How dare you say that! - 25,100 hits for the "idiomatic standard" present tense version
                How could you dare say that! - 211 hits
                How dared you say that! - 3 hits
                How did you dare say that! - 0 hits




                Note that I added the exclamation marks myself (GB doesn't do punctuation). Obviously, that could be followed by a clause (How dare you say that I'm fat!), but that would be the same for all variations, so the relative preferences should still be valid.






                share|improve this answer


























                • The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

                  – Colin Fine
                  9 hours ago













                • Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

                  – V2Blast
                  5 hours ago
















                6














                Technically speaking, if you were complaining about how someone had spoken to you in the past, you could reasonably use past tense dared.



                But idiomatically, the expression How dare you! [do/say something outrageous] is something of a "fixed expression / set phrase", and I suspect some people might have misgivings about modifying dare for tense like that. To my ear, it would be at least slightly more "natural" (though of course it can't be fully natural, given it's riffing of a "frozen form") to use...




                How could you dare speak to me like that! (using could as the past tense of can)




                But that's a fine point. For most purposes, OP's version (or indeed, How could you have dared...) wouldn't be noticed as either "incorrect" or "unusual".





                EDIT: Or perhaps not such a "fine point" after all. Here are some relevant searches in Google Books...




                How dare you say that! - 25,100 hits for the "idiomatic standard" present tense version
                How could you dare say that! - 211 hits
                How dared you say that! - 3 hits
                How did you dare say that! - 0 hits




                Note that I added the exclamation marks myself (GB doesn't do punctuation). Obviously, that could be followed by a clause (How dare you say that I'm fat!), but that would be the same for all variations, so the relative preferences should still be valid.






                share|improve this answer


























                • The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

                  – Colin Fine
                  9 hours ago













                • Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

                  – V2Blast
                  5 hours ago














                6












                6








                6







                Technically speaking, if you were complaining about how someone had spoken to you in the past, you could reasonably use past tense dared.



                But idiomatically, the expression How dare you! [do/say something outrageous] is something of a "fixed expression / set phrase", and I suspect some people might have misgivings about modifying dare for tense like that. To my ear, it would be at least slightly more "natural" (though of course it can't be fully natural, given it's riffing of a "frozen form") to use...




                How could you dare speak to me like that! (using could as the past tense of can)




                But that's a fine point. For most purposes, OP's version (or indeed, How could you have dared...) wouldn't be noticed as either "incorrect" or "unusual".





                EDIT: Or perhaps not such a "fine point" after all. Here are some relevant searches in Google Books...




                How dare you say that! - 25,100 hits for the "idiomatic standard" present tense version
                How could you dare say that! - 211 hits
                How dared you say that! - 3 hits
                How did you dare say that! - 0 hits




                Note that I added the exclamation marks myself (GB doesn't do punctuation). Obviously, that could be followed by a clause (How dare you say that I'm fat!), but that would be the same for all variations, so the relative preferences should still be valid.






                share|improve this answer















                Technically speaking, if you were complaining about how someone had spoken to you in the past, you could reasonably use past tense dared.



                But idiomatically, the expression How dare you! [do/say something outrageous] is something of a "fixed expression / set phrase", and I suspect some people might have misgivings about modifying dare for tense like that. To my ear, it would be at least slightly more "natural" (though of course it can't be fully natural, given it's riffing of a "frozen form") to use...




                How could you dare speak to me like that! (using could as the past tense of can)




                But that's a fine point. For most purposes, OP's version (or indeed, How could you have dared...) wouldn't be noticed as either "incorrect" or "unusual".





                EDIT: Or perhaps not such a "fine point" after all. Here are some relevant searches in Google Books...




                How dare you say that! - 25,100 hits for the "idiomatic standard" present tense version
                How could you dare say that! - 211 hits
                How dared you say that! - 3 hits
                How did you dare say that! - 0 hits




                Note that I added the exclamation marks myself (GB doesn't do punctuation). Obviously, that could be followed by a clause (How dare you say that I'm fat!), but that would be the same for all variations, so the relative preferences should still be valid.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 10 hours ago

























                answered 10 hours ago









                FumbleFingersFumbleFingers

                44.3k154118




                44.3k154118













                • The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

                  – Colin Fine
                  9 hours ago













                • Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

                  – V2Blast
                  5 hours ago



















                • The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

                  – Colin Fine
                  9 hours ago













                • Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

                  – V2Blast
                  5 hours ago

















                The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

                – Colin Fine
                9 hours ago







                The iWeb corpus is not much help for those examples, perhaps because being a corpus of website material, that sort of direct address doesn't occur much. Only the first of those gets any hits at all: 89 of them. Without "say that", the figures are 4783, 17, 10, 13 for your four phrases respectively. iWeb is one of a dozen corpora available at BYU

                – Colin Fine
                9 hours ago















                Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

                – V2Blast
                5 hours ago





                Rather than adding "EDIT:" at the end and adding relevant info that contradicts one of your claims, you should simply edit your answer to stand as if it were always the best version of itself. Anyone interested in an older version of your answer can simply view the revision history.

                – V2Blast
                5 hours ago











                1















                How dared you to speak to me like that?




                I have Grammarly installed, and as I type that sentence, it throws an error asking me to change from 'dared' to 'dare!' So yes, dare is common and soothing to our general knowledge of English!



                On the other hand, if you change the question into a statement or sentence, you'll understand that it's grammatical:




                You dared to speak to me like that




                So, it's just past tense.



                But 'How dare you...' is a way common in daily English. Check this -



                'dare' also serves as an auxiliary verb chiefly used in questions and negatives






                share|improve this answer




























                  1















                  How dared you to speak to me like that?




                  I have Grammarly installed, and as I type that sentence, it throws an error asking me to change from 'dared' to 'dare!' So yes, dare is common and soothing to our general knowledge of English!



                  On the other hand, if you change the question into a statement or sentence, you'll understand that it's grammatical:




                  You dared to speak to me like that




                  So, it's just past tense.



                  But 'How dare you...' is a way common in daily English. Check this -



                  'dare' also serves as an auxiliary verb chiefly used in questions and negatives






                  share|improve this answer


























                    1












                    1








                    1








                    How dared you to speak to me like that?




                    I have Grammarly installed, and as I type that sentence, it throws an error asking me to change from 'dared' to 'dare!' So yes, dare is common and soothing to our general knowledge of English!



                    On the other hand, if you change the question into a statement or sentence, you'll understand that it's grammatical:




                    You dared to speak to me like that




                    So, it's just past tense.



                    But 'How dare you...' is a way common in daily English. Check this -



                    'dare' also serves as an auxiliary verb chiefly used in questions and negatives






                    share|improve this answer














                    How dared you to speak to me like that?




                    I have Grammarly installed, and as I type that sentence, it throws an error asking me to change from 'dared' to 'dare!' So yes, dare is common and soothing to our general knowledge of English!



                    On the other hand, if you change the question into a statement or sentence, you'll understand that it's grammatical:




                    You dared to speak to me like that




                    So, it's just past tense.



                    But 'How dare you...' is a way common in daily English. Check this -



                    'dare' also serves as an auxiliary verb chiefly used in questions and negatives







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 2 hours ago









                    Maulik VMaulik V

                    51.2k63212391




                    51.2k63212391























                        -1














                        The second is correct in the present, but if it was in the past, I would say




                        How did you dare to speak to me like that?







                        share|improve this answer




























                          -1














                          The second is correct in the present, but if it was in the past, I would say




                          How did you dare to speak to me like that?







                          share|improve this answer


























                            -1












                            -1








                            -1







                            The second is correct in the present, but if it was in the past, I would say




                            How did you dare to speak to me like that?







                            share|improve this answer













                            The second is correct in the present, but if it was in the past, I would say




                            How did you dare to speak to me like that?








                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 10 hours ago









                            Weather VaneWeather Vane

                            3,7521417




                            3,7521417























                                -1














                                "How dare you/he/she/they [do something (present tense)]" is a set expression conveying present anger that an action is being done, has just been done, or was done in the more distant past. The tense of 'dare' does not change, nor does the tense of the verb of the action being complained about.



                                I come into my room. You have a glass in your hand. How dare you drink my whisky!



                                You tell me that your brother called me a fool yesterday. How dare he say that!



                                I recall that a politician, who I don't support, did a bad thing 20 years ago. How dare he do that!



                                Although the expression is phrased like a question, it is not one. If we wish to know how someone found the courage to do a dangerous thing in the past, we would phrase the question conventionally. We might say "How did you dare to attack the gang of thugs, armed only with a stick?", or "How did he dare to enter the lion's cage, knowing it might kill him?"



                                To express sorrow or anger that someone behaved badly, we could ask e.g. "How could you speak to my grandmother like that?"






                                share|improve this answer




























                                  -1














                                  "How dare you/he/she/they [do something (present tense)]" is a set expression conveying present anger that an action is being done, has just been done, or was done in the more distant past. The tense of 'dare' does not change, nor does the tense of the verb of the action being complained about.



                                  I come into my room. You have a glass in your hand. How dare you drink my whisky!



                                  You tell me that your brother called me a fool yesterday. How dare he say that!



                                  I recall that a politician, who I don't support, did a bad thing 20 years ago. How dare he do that!



                                  Although the expression is phrased like a question, it is not one. If we wish to know how someone found the courage to do a dangerous thing in the past, we would phrase the question conventionally. We might say "How did you dare to attack the gang of thugs, armed only with a stick?", or "How did he dare to enter the lion's cage, knowing it might kill him?"



                                  To express sorrow or anger that someone behaved badly, we could ask e.g. "How could you speak to my grandmother like that?"






                                  share|improve this answer


























                                    -1












                                    -1








                                    -1







                                    "How dare you/he/she/they [do something (present tense)]" is a set expression conveying present anger that an action is being done, has just been done, or was done in the more distant past. The tense of 'dare' does not change, nor does the tense of the verb of the action being complained about.



                                    I come into my room. You have a glass in your hand. How dare you drink my whisky!



                                    You tell me that your brother called me a fool yesterday. How dare he say that!



                                    I recall that a politician, who I don't support, did a bad thing 20 years ago. How dare he do that!



                                    Although the expression is phrased like a question, it is not one. If we wish to know how someone found the courage to do a dangerous thing in the past, we would phrase the question conventionally. We might say "How did you dare to attack the gang of thugs, armed only with a stick?", or "How did he dare to enter the lion's cage, knowing it might kill him?"



                                    To express sorrow or anger that someone behaved badly, we could ask e.g. "How could you speak to my grandmother like that?"






                                    share|improve this answer













                                    "How dare you/he/she/they [do something (present tense)]" is a set expression conveying present anger that an action is being done, has just been done, or was done in the more distant past. The tense of 'dare' does not change, nor does the tense of the verb of the action being complained about.



                                    I come into my room. You have a glass in your hand. How dare you drink my whisky!



                                    You tell me that your brother called me a fool yesterday. How dare he say that!



                                    I recall that a politician, who I don't support, did a bad thing 20 years ago. How dare he do that!



                                    Although the expression is phrased like a question, it is not one. If we wish to know how someone found the courage to do a dangerous thing in the past, we would phrase the question conventionally. We might say "How did you dare to attack the gang of thugs, armed only with a stick?", or "How did he dare to enter the lion's cage, knowing it might kill him?"



                                    To express sorrow or anger that someone behaved badly, we could ask e.g. "How could you speak to my grandmother like that?"







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered 10 hours ago









                                    Michael HarveyMichael Harvey

                                    13.2k11330




                                    13.2k11330























                                        -3















                                        How dared you to speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a past event.




                                        How dare you speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a current event.




                                        How dared you speak to me like that




                                        is just wrong. It scrambles the time markers in what is an idiomatic construction.



                                        EDIT: Weather Vane and I agree on the substance. And




                                        How did you dare to speak to me like that




                                        seems far more euphonious than "how dared you," but there is a perfectly acceptable past form of the verb "dare."






                                        share|improve this answer



















                                        • 1





                                          I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                                          – Colin Fine
                                          10 hours ago













                                        • @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                                          – FumbleFingers
                                          10 hours ago
















                                        -3















                                        How dared you to speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a past event.




                                        How dare you speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a current event.




                                        How dared you speak to me like that




                                        is just wrong. It scrambles the time markers in what is an idiomatic construction.



                                        EDIT: Weather Vane and I agree on the substance. And




                                        How did you dare to speak to me like that




                                        seems far more euphonious than "how dared you," but there is a perfectly acceptable past form of the verb "dare."






                                        share|improve this answer



















                                        • 1





                                          I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                                          – Colin Fine
                                          10 hours ago













                                        • @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                                          – FumbleFingers
                                          10 hours ago














                                        -3












                                        -3








                                        -3








                                        How dared you to speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a past event.




                                        How dare you speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a current event.




                                        How dared you speak to me like that




                                        is just wrong. It scrambles the time markers in what is an idiomatic construction.



                                        EDIT: Weather Vane and I agree on the substance. And




                                        How did you dare to speak to me like that




                                        seems far more euphonious than "how dared you," but there is a perfectly acceptable past form of the verb "dare."






                                        share|improve this answer














                                        How dared you to speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a past event.




                                        How dare you speak to me like that




                                        is fine. It refers to a current event.




                                        How dared you speak to me like that




                                        is just wrong. It scrambles the time markers in what is an idiomatic construction.



                                        EDIT: Weather Vane and I agree on the substance. And




                                        How did you dare to speak to me like that




                                        seems far more euphonious than "how dared you," but there is a perfectly acceptable past form of the verb "dare."







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered 10 hours ago









                                        Jeff MorrowJeff Morrow

                                        9,9501125




                                        9,9501125








                                        • 1





                                          I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                                          – Colin Fine
                                          10 hours ago













                                        • @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                                          – FumbleFingers
                                          10 hours ago














                                        • 1





                                          I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                                          – Colin Fine
                                          10 hours ago













                                        • @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                                          – FumbleFingers
                                          10 hours ago








                                        1




                                        1





                                        I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                                        – Colin Fine
                                        10 hours ago







                                        I don't agree with much of this answer. How dared you is using dare as a modal, and in that form, it doesn't take a to infinitive (see [this])(grammaring.com/the-semi-modal-dare). On the other hand, How dared you speak to me like that is perfectly consistent time-wise, because speak is a bare infinitive, with no tense. Compare How can you speak like that? (present) vs How could you speak like that? (past).

                                        – Colin Fine
                                        10 hours ago















                                        @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                                        – FumbleFingers
                                        10 hours ago





                                        @ColinFine: I didn't have the relevant knowledge (or terminology! :) to hand when I somewhat cautiously advanced my proposition that it doesn't feel quite right to explicitly change the tense of dare itself in this particular "remonstrance, expostulation, call-it-what-you-will". But after posting it, and seeing that there were two other answers disagreeing with what I thought, I was heartened to find what I consider "supportive data" from Google Books!

                                        – FumbleFingers
                                        10 hours ago










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