0 past simple and past participle of harm
1 to hurt someone or damage something:
Thankfully no one was harmed in the accident.
The government's reputation has already been harmed by a series of scandals.
Research shows that it is not divorce per se that harms children, but the continuing conflict between parents.
The oil that discharged into the sea seriously harmed a lot of birds and animals.
She only buys dolphin-friendly tuna fish that is caught without harming dolphins.
If you harm her, you're going to have the police to reckon with.
He claims that the report has harmed his reputation.
From this work, a more complex picture emerges about the developmental trajectories of children harmed both early and later in life.
On the other side of the equation is the thought that an individual can be harmed by being brought into existence.
The privation theory, however, implies, to the contrary, that sin is simply the good, harmed.