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were harming
noun
Injury; hurt; damage; detriment; misfortune.
synonyms
Exact(58)
Commentators said his evidence showed how public employee unions were harming America.
And they argued that the arrests were harming the relationship between the police and young people.
The objective was to root out witches, evil sorcerers who were harming the country, the villagers were told.
The Turkish sanctions, he added, were harming all Syrians, including the demonstrators whom Turkey purported to support.
He seems to have concluded that greater international intolerance of terrorism, and the AUC's drug-trafficking, were harming his cause.
Kit Sadgrove, who manages Etsio, admitted internships were harming social mobility by stopping poorer people from gaining experience but did not believe he was breaching minimum wage laws.
I was diversifying in my own industry to allow for these things that were harming us in terms of lost sales.
In the summer of 2012 there was a 20-point gap between those who thought cuts were harming Britain and those who thought they were helping.
The Education Department eventually approved the transfer after a doctor said the stress and long commutes to Lehman were harming the boy, the suit said.
Warning that the attacks were harming the state's tourism industry, Mr Moore said he would lobby Canberra to lift the ban on fishing of great whites.
The collection, undertaken to determine how birds were harming humans, can now be used to determine how humans are harming birds.
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