Dictionary
to perils
verb
To cause to be in danger; to imperil; to risk.
Exact(8)
Taking and making materials we need has always exposed workers to perils.
Camp and child care cost money, but leaving children alone exposes them to perils, from boredom to crime.
While considerable attention has been paid to perils of Queens Boulevard, the six lanes of traffic and two medians across Eastern Parkway make this a busy, dangerous intersection for pedestrians in Crown Heights.
In a telephone interview from Tromso, Rosa Meehan, the division chief in Alaska for marine mammals management of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, said that the agreement — among countries with a range of environmental views — signaled the strength of the science pointing to perils for the bears.
For one, their close-in habitable zones could leave them extra vulnerable to perils such as stellar flares.
Disjointed access to weather-related information and agricultural extension services, disposes the smallholders to perils of adverse climatic situations in the area (Le Dang et al. 2014).
Similar(50)
Certainly, Ezralow is no stranger to peril.
Simultaneously, the environment edges closer to peril.
McLean's approach to peril is to see humor in it.
And each of them has the ability to react coolly and rationally to peril.
In either case, the proximity to peril is intentional, and that makes the risk less compelling.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com