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Exact(14)
To lose her would have jeopardised the research.
Clearly, that would have jeopardised the operation, even if parliament had been sitting in August.
Mr Crompton ludicrously compared BBC News to the pre-Leveson tabloids, claiming that the broadcaster would have jeopardised the investigation.
Mr Blackstock claimed that he had not reported the alleged abuse sooner because it would have jeopardised his chances of getting a professional contract.
America would have jeopardised the "exorbitant privilege", as a French minister once put it, of borrowing in the world's most trusted currency.
He pointedly explained that he had rejected the far-right's conditions for joining his government because they would have jeopardised relations with America.
Similar(46)
Goya may have been a political liberal but he wouldn't have jeopardised his hard-won new position as first court painter – the first Spaniard since Velázquez to hold the role – in order to score political points at the expense of his patrons.
(The Jesuit elders have made a lesser-of-two evils choice: if they had not abandoned a few missions, the entire order would have been jeopardised).
Had he done so he would have severely jeopardised both his chance of freedom and the safety of his family in Libya.
Had the constitutional reform been approved, this would have been jeopardised, she says, since the councils would have depended directly on the president and his largesse.That sense of inclusion remains Mr Chávez's prime political asset.
Such mass mortalities would have further jeopardised a species already in danger of becoming extinct.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com