If you’re going to name a ship, whether an aircraft carrier or an interstellar starship, you could do worse than to name it the Intrepid, as both the United States military and Star Trek writers have done, respectively. (Technically “Intrepid” is a class of Trek ships that includes the Voyager, etc., but you get the drift.) Intrepid, after all, comes from the Latin word intrepidus, itself formed by the combination of the prefix in-, meaning “not,” and the adjective trepidus, meaning “alarmed.” When not designating sea or space vessels, intrepid aptly describes anyone—from explorers to reporters—who ventures bravely into unknown territory, though often you’ll see the word loaded with irony, as in “an intrepid couch surfer endeavored to watch every installment of the beloved sci-fi series in chronological order.” Intrepid word lovers may be interested to know of the existence of trepid, meaning “fearful”; it predates intrepid but most are too trepid (or simply unaware of its existence) to use it.
The heroes are intrepid small-business owners, investigative reporters, plaintiffs and their lawyers, and, of course, Nader himself and his grass-roots organizations.—Jonathan Chait, New York Times Book Review, 3 Feb. 2008Author and explorer Dame Freya Stark was one of the most intrepid adventurers of all time. (T. E. Lawrence, no slouch in the travel department himself, called her "gallant" and "remarkable.")—Kimberly Robinson, Travel & Leisure, December 1999Meanwhile, the intrepid Florentine traveler Marco Polo had been to China and brought back with him a noodle dish that became Italian pasta …—Norman F. Cantor, The Civilization of the Middle Ages, 1993
an intrepid explorer who probed parts of the rain forest never previously attempted
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But for true intrepid travelers, these trains are almost becoming too ‘mainstream’.—Rebecca Ann Hughes, Forbes.com, 27 May 2026 Together with Janet and intrepid reporter Robbie Robertson (Lamorne Morris), a fixture of the extended Spider-Man universe, Reilly has to figure out how to stop the city from spinning out of control.—Nicholas Quah, Vulture, 26 May 2026 Perhaps intrepid folks were throwing on gowns and trying to blend in with the walking invitees?—Jada Yuan, HollywoodReporter, 22 May 2026 Yet Hull scored 70 of their own in an intrepid season, bettering the return managed in any of the club’s previous three promotions from the Championship in 2008, 2013 and 2016.—Philip Buckingham, New York Times, 22 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for intrepid
Word History
Etymology
Latin intrepidus, from in- + trepidus alarmed — more at trepidation