0 past simple and past participle of jeopardize --
1 to put something such as a plan or system in danger of being harmed or damaged: --
In contrast, infieldswhere new results may invalidate previous ones, the authority of scientists may be jeopardized as research develops in new directions.
I do not think speech communication with robots is jeopardized if such responses are not allowed.
On an experimental scale these are of the same order but the conclusion is not seriously jeopardized.
On the other hand, the benefits of applying the resilience paradigm can be seriously jeopardized without careful attention to several critical precautions.
Those reasons, however, must be ones which display justice as congruent with the agent's own good, for if they do not, then stability is jeopardized.
The purity of ground and river water was jeopardized by an increased production of urban waste.
In both cases, their personal freedom could be jeopardized.
Future research needs to avoid the methodological and theoretical difficulties that have frequently jeopardized investigative studies.