Similar words: damage, damages, damaged, do damage to, fire damage, imagine, imagined, damaged goods. Meaning: ['dæmɪdʒɪŋ] adj. 1. (sometimes followed by `to') causing harm or injury 2. designed or tending to discredit, especially without positive or helpful suggestions.
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(61) But it is not at all clear that high dividends have been damaging, in themselves.
(62) It is the big money from the millionaires that is most damaging.
(63) When mistakes are made a full apology is often less damaging than a grudging admission that events have not gone as planned.
(64) Too often over-involved people burn out without realizing it and end up damaging their cause and themselves.
(65) Moderate Kosovan leaders such as Ibrahim Rugova have condemned the guerrillas for damaging the quest for independence.
(66) Never use aluminium as poisonous seepage will react with the plant alkaloids and its vitamin content, thus damaging the therapeutic properties.
(67) Poisoning rats with warfarin reduces the damage but is costly and possibly damaging to the environment.
(68) The owner of property can consent to some one destroying or damaging that property.
(69) Ray Daniel, Pompey's regular left-back, will be out for three weeks after damaging ankle ligaments against Millwall.
(70) Most damaging of all, some scientists fell into this very trap.
(71) But he does stand a good chance of profoundly damaging the candidacy of Bob Dole.
(72) Unfortunately, most of these efforts were directed towards reducing non-oil imports, which had damaging effects on domestic production.
(73) Without insulin, sugar lingers in the bloodstream, silently damaging the internal organs.
(74) In the long run, persistent current account deficits are difficult and costly to sustain and are damaging to an economy.
(75) It is sudden sharp bursts of sun which are most damaging.
(76) It appears to be most damaging to rapidly growing organs in the body, Etzel said.
(77) There seems to be no good history antidote strong enough to drive out this bad and damaging chapter of history.
(78) There are signs that these damaging limitations to free and open communication can be overcome.
(79) I was struck on one of my artificial legs, damaging the calliper.
(80) This whole extravaganza is demeaning, debasing and deeply damaging to what should be serious political discourse, the protesters complain.
(81) But because of their longevity they are expected to go on damaging the ozone layer for decades.
(82) Within a short while it became clear that this policy was damaging the rice crop.
(83) The potentially damaging essentialism and determinism of this approach is deflected by an argument that there is no inevitability in these forms.
(84) The Salinas government is adamant that a large devaluation would be both damaging and unnecessary.
(85) Similarly, workfare might expose people to the stigma and frequent humiliations that are damaging to health. Sentencedict.com
(86) The British beef crisis was damaging to the livelihoods of thousands of people in the industry.
(87) The runoff is not as damaging to plants as sodium chloride, and the calcium may help bring down soil acidity.
(88) However, it is never too late to stop a damaging practice that has a deleterious impact upon the Catholic community.
(89) A concatenation of events particularly damaging Mrs Thatcher was subsequently compounded by errors of tactics and organisation by those running her campaign.
(90) These lenses are much smaller than ours, so less potentially damaging light reaches the sensory cells.
More similar words: damage, damages, damaged, do damage to, fire damage, imagine, imagined, damaged goods, imaginary, damage control, maginot line, imaginable, imagination, imaginative, accidental damage, collateral damage, unimaginable, unimaginative, imaginatively, aging, raging, foraging, engaging, managing, averaging, packaging, encouraging, leveraging, discouraging, disparaging.