Sentence examples for danger of encountering from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

Still, many people continue to think of housing as an investment, and so it does seem that we are in danger of encountering another whopper bubble someday.

There is little danger of encountering anything like official propaganda, since the Arab novelist stands, almost by definition — as a thinker, as a conduit of intellectual life — in opposition to the retrogressive forces in the modern Arab state.

But surfers like Shan Smith, 32, who said he had surfed this beach for 20 years, did not need to be told about the danger of encountering a shark.

This experience points out that at high orbital inclinations, such as that of MIR and that projected for the International Space Station, the danger of encountering harmful radiation effects are likely unless the electronic components of the flight hardware are resistant to such impacts.

After my second expedition, I could add the reverse of the coin to my experience: the impenetrable fog of the arctic summer, all the fancy equipment broken down on the ice, no samples at all after several weeks of hard work, the real danger of encountering polar bears, and--yes--difficult colleagues onboard with whom you have to get along, for as long as the cruise lasts.

Wayne was in danger of encountering a much larger British force sent to oppose his movements.

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Similar(51)

The affluent middle classes feel that they can attend modern stadiums such as the Emirates and the Etihad with their families, with little risk of encountering danger.

Of course, the danger of being highly connected to lots of people is that you're at risk of encountering many people when they are in bad moods.

The chief danger within wasn't the wrath of the godly statues, but the prospect of encountering a leopard.

On the other hand, the dangers of encounter with a polluted person (e.g., an "untouchable" in India) or object (e.g., feces, in most cultures) arise directly from the pollution that passes from that person or object to oneself.

People pontificating about the dangers of encounters on the wild side are often the same people who don't have time to learn to grow a bonsai tree, take a salsa class, play chess or tennis, or master chocolate dessert or spun sugar.

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