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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(121) The causal connection between mood-altering substance or behaviour and the damaging consequences continues to be denied and the denial is intensified.
(122) Indeed, both gamma rays and X-rays can be extremely damaging to living cells.
(123) This seemingly symbiotic link has been damaging to the more general applicability of these criteria in other contexts.
(124) The bombastic, vainglorious Nivelle had virtually announced to the world his grandiose expectations, making the dreadful defeat doubly damaging.
(125) Up to 1500 patients suffered damaging side-effects after taking the drug.
(126) Where constipation is the predominant symptom, there may be considerable discomfort which again is damaging to morale.
(127) The Democrats had argued that the embarrassment of a shuttered government was damaging the reputation of the House.
(128) The effects of comet and asteroid impacts are potentially damaging to life in general, and to human civilization in particular.
(129) In his acceptance speech, he said that the Government's economic policy was damaging business in the north-east.
(130) With a loud splintering crack the canoe broke, ending all hopes of damaging enemy shipping.
(131) The causal connection between the addictive use and the damaging consequences may be denied.
(132) Inside the body, the virus is powerful and can be extremely damaging to human health.
(133) Facts: pleaded guilty to three counts of theft and five counts of damaging property.
(134) The consequent adverse publicity was widely held to be damaging to the Labour cause.
(135) It is this last point which is perhaps the most damaging.
(136) A spokeswoman for the charity said today that the bogus collections could have damaging repercussions.
(137) The publicity that followed the scandal has been extremely damaging.
(138) He's had a lifelong fight with feminists who accuse him of extreme male chauvinism and damaging their dignity.
(139) This has had damaging environmental consequences, such as creating new pressures for house building and increasing reliance on car-based transport.
(140) Despite the points listed above, many capable employees fail to see how they are damaging relationships all around them.
(141) More recently the focus has been on literature which might be thought of as racially damaging.
(142) A spill would be especially damaging since equipment normally used for containment could not operate in such shallow waters.
(143) Whenever you're in conflict with someone, there is one factor that can make the difference between damaging your relationship and deepening it. That factor is attitude. William James
(144) Mr. Hunt I withdraw the commendation that I gave the hon. Gentleman, but only because that is damaging his political career.
(145) The recent court cases have been very damaging to the public image of the medical profession.
(145) Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
(146) These fluctuations can be very damaging to business confidence and may discourage long-term investment.
(147) Radium is readily absorbed into the body where it concentrates in the bone marrow and gives off very damaging alpha particles.
(148) The courthouse bomb shattered 22 windows Thursday and blew out a chunk of wall while damaging four businesses on the surrounding block.
(149) Second, governments have desired to avoid the politically damaging disruption of the network by industrial action.
(150) What is said is really damaging.
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.