0 to put someone or something at risk or in danger of being harmed, damaged, or destroyed -- 使處於險境;危及;危害
The problem was that the traditional policy had been endangered by the ideological developments of the 1840s, abroad and at home.
These are the tokens that are most endangered by the high dress, as they are then distinguished neither in acoustic space, nor by length.
Offering formal training for teaching, which implied that women needed to be taught to teach, endangered this understanding of femininity.
Thus, dreams tend to represent even happiness in the light of the possible threats that might endanger it.
Homologous oocytes, however, are not easily available in some species, such as endangered wild animals and the human.
Overall, endangered species are likely to have greatly reduced long-term evolutionary potential compared with non-endangered species.
Strikes that cause inconvenience (even severe inconvenience) to others are quite different from strikes that endanger individual or communal lives or health.
Targeted nations are those which conduct commercial shrimp fishing operations within the geographic range of distribution of endangered sea turtles.