Derring-do is a quirky holdover from Middle English that came to occupy its present place in the language by a series of mistakes and misunderstandings. In Middle English, dorring don meant simply "daring to do." The phrase was misprinted as derrynge do in a 15th-century work by poet John Lydgate, and Edmund Spenser took it up from there. (A glossary to Spenser's work defined it as "manhood and chevalrie.") Literary author Sir Walter Scott and others brought the noun into modern use.
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Passersby with timing and a certain derring-do have measured their odds and eyed their paths.—
Nathan Heller,
New Yorker,
1 June 2026 In this version, the derring-do is more covert and the battles mostly take place behind closed doors.—
Christopher Arnott,
Hartford Courant,
11 Mar. 2026 The Bursteins ran their shop with a sense of derring-do, determination — and a willingness to defy convention.—
Samantha Conti,
Footwear News,
19 Feb. 2026 His dumb derring-do went viral on VHS tapes, earning him an MTV show and five feature films.—
Amy Nicholson,
Los Angeles Times,
26 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for derring-do
Word History
Etymology
Middle English dorring don daring to do, from dorring (gerund of dorren to dare) + don to do