0 damage; injury; distress -- keburukan
I’ll make sure you come to no harm
He meant no harm
It’ll do you no harm to go.
1 to cause (a person) harm -- mencederakan
There’s no need to be frightened – he won’t harm you.
But, apart from that, it also directly and immediately harms her by reducing her control of the purely self-regarding portion of her life.
Even if ' verb ' is taken here as a shorthand for ' argument-taker ', it may be thought that no harm is done, because prototypical argument-takers are verbs.
He found that serious injury was rare following an incident as either intervention or luck tended to prevent significant harm in the majority of cases.
From this work, a more complex picture emerges about the developmental trajectories of children harmed both early and later in life.
The magnitude of possible harm would be sufficient to trigger protections.
Ultimately, as we shall see, property owners would, indeed, be found to have a duty to the general public to protect their property from harm.
If the proposal directly harms persons without their free and informed consent, then bioethicists should agree that the proposal is to be rejected.
However, the probability of any harm from 100 mg nifedepine, compared with the placebo group, is quite high.
中文繁体
傷害,損害,危害, 傷害,損害…
More中文简体
伤害,损害,危害, 伤害,损害…
MoreEspañol
daño, hacer daño a, estropear…
MorePortuguês
mal, fazer mal a, machucar…
More日本語
害, 損害, ~に危害を加える…
MoreTürk dili
zarar, ziyan, zarar vermek…
MoreFrançais
mal [masculine], tort [masculine], causer du tort…
MoreCatalan
mal, fer mal a, fer malbé…
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