0 present participle of endanger
1 to put someone or something at risk or in danger of being harmed, damaged, or destroyed:
If the accessibility of blood transfusions decreases, the voluntary blood donor might turn away, endangering blood safety much more.
Without enjoying diplomatic immunity and often endangering themselves and their families, they undertook a huge effort in the area of human-rights preservation.
It does so at the cost of transferring demographic risks to pensioners, but without endangering the basic subsistence function of the pensions.
Both are important goods, and endangering them would compromise our policy recommendations.
At the same time, however, it results in a great increase in inbreeding level of the purged population, endangering the long-term potential of adaptation.
In this context, production systems should be designed to permit crossbreeding without endangering the parent indigenous straightbreds.
Can this drawback be remedied without endangering the national existence?
He would replace the endangering word by the first word that would occur to him.