Sentence examples for peril involved from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

On Thursday, possibly sensing the political peril involved in siding with the anti-vaccine movement, Shumlin signed the bill without much publicity.

He is far more comfortable while watching his adored father, Yakup (Erdal Besikcioglu), a beekeeper, at work, despite the peril involved: the honey Yusup cultivates requires the suspension of hives from tree branches at dangerous heights.

Sylvia Zerbini, for example, is not content with dangling by a heel from a trapeze high over the netless ring and performing other acrobatic feats with such seemingly effortless grace that her art almost -- but not quite -- obliterates the peril involved.

Similar(55)

In this daring first novel, a computer game designer suspected of murdering his obese wife is investigated by two detectives well acquainted with the perils involved in marriage — one of them Dr. Sam Sheppard.

But even decades later, for thousands of mountaineers, the lure of the gleaming white summit seems to outweigh the perils involved in trekking to base camp, crossing the infamous Khumbu icefall and setting up four camps before attempting to climb to the 8,848-meter 8,848-metert) summit.

Of all the perils involved in attending a party in New York, one of the greatest is to encounter the talker, for the talker is likely to monopolize all conversation and, in the process, mistake the haunted silence of submission for the happy silence of interest.

How can a state function when over 25% of its population is unemployed?" Ahead of Monday's eurogroup meeting meeting, finance minister Euclid Tskalotos warned darkly of the perils involved in demanding yet more cuts of a nation whose economy has shrunk by more than 25% in the six years since successive governments began slashing budgets in return for bailout aid.

Business is private, and business is good (notwithstanding the real perils involved when museums get too cozy with corporate interests).

It is typically characterized as a financial arrangement to protect low-income people against specific perils in exchange for regular premium payments proportionate to the likelihood and cost of the risk involved (Biener and Eling 2011; Churchill 2007).

According to Churchill [13], p.12, CBHI: " refers to the protection of low-income people against specific perils in exchange for regular premium payments proportionate to the likelihood and cost of the risk involved".

Certainly, the stylish New York women on the following pages — call them socialites at your peril — are involved with charities, know their red-carpet photographers and publicists and look great in the season's black cocktail dresses.

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