Dictionary
To imperil
verb
To put into peril; to place in danger or cause a hazard.
Exact(60)
"To imperil the reputation of clean athletes and to extrapolate from one or two readings you can't do.
To imperil its sales at this time, prompting the obvious consequent reduction in advertising revenue, would be foolish.
Nothing would be done to imperil that potential".
The decision threatened to imperil the merger, without which LICH would be forced to close.
They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they did not want to imperil the talks.
The cluster munitions are not the only indiscriminate heavy weapon system to imperil the city.
One was not to imperil the future of their clubs by loading them with impossible debt.
The growing scandal has already appeared to imperil his political career.
By contrast, price-cutting does tend to imperil overall revenue despite relatively modest sales uplifts.
A declaration of war by Macedonia would be likely to imperil that fragile government, however.
Her Brexit will do nothing to imperil the already-fragile constitutional settlement in Northern Ireland.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com