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harm
noun as in injury, evil
Strongest matches
abuse, damage, disservice, impairment, loss, mischief, misuse, sabotage, vandalism, violence, wrong
Strong matches
detriment, hurt, ill, immorality, infliction, iniquity, marring, mischance, misfortune, noxiousness, outrage, perniciousness, prejudice, ravage, ruin, ruination, sin, sinfulness, vice, wickedness
Weak matches
verb as in injure; cause evil
Strongest matches
abuse, damage, hurt, impair, inconvenience, maim, mar, outrage, prejudice, ruin, sabotage, sap, shatter, shock, tarnish, trample, traumatize, undermine, wreck
Example Sentences
Republicans and Trump's base voters are increasingly expressing anxiety over the way DOGE's rampage through the federal bureaucracy is harming not just the hated "liberals," but his own voters.
"The growing body of evidence about the harms of smartphones outweighing the benefits for children is both compelling and concerning," she said.
Activists and academic experts say fossil fuel companies, like tobacco companies before them, use ads at sports stadiums and other cultural institutions to build goodwill and normalize the harms caused by their products.
And both things can be true — that you are critiquing something without aiming to harm and also wanting women to feel a little bit better.
For a judge to issue a temporary restraining order, the jurist also must conclude that one side in a dispute would otherwise suffer irreparable harm.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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