0 present participle of endanger --
1 to put someone or something at risk or in danger of being harmed, damaged, or destroyed: --
Physicians employed at the attending or staff physician level cannot strike by collectively withholding care without potentially endangering patients.
On the contrary, the government was capable of maintaining its interests without endangering the legitimacy of the system.
Such children's basic needs are not adequately met, thus endangering their well-being and development.
To increase the purging effect without endangering the survival, efforts should be made to intensify selection and reduce drift if possible.
In a linked system, the stress may appear at any part endangering the whole.
Local suppliers and distributors feared the loss of markets to large utilities and the endangering of environmentally friendly combined heat and power schemes.
He would make, instead, silly modifications in the text: substitute less dangerous words or clauses for any endangering part of speech.
He would replace the endangering word by the first word that would occur to him.