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Harm   /hɑrm/   Listen
Harm

noun
1.
Any physical damage to the body caused by violence or accident or fracture etc..  Synonyms: hurt, injury, trauma.
2.
The occurrence of a change for the worse.  Synonyms: damage, impairment.
3.
The act of damaging something or someone.  Synonyms: damage, hurt, scathe.
verb
(past & past part. harmed; pres. part. harming)
1.
Cause or do harm to.



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"Harm" Quotes from Famous Books



... occasion for its existence.[1038] The equal protection clause does not mean that all occupations that are called by the same name must be treated in the same way.[1039] The legislature is free to recognize degrees of harm; a law which hits the evil where it is most felt will not be overthrown because there are other instances to which it might have been applied.[1040] The State may do what it can to prevent what is deemed an evil and stop short of those cases in which ...
— The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation • Edward Corwin

... be allowed to exert herself in that way," observed Mr. Lacy;—"she may do herself much harm." ...
— Ellen Middleton--A Tale • Georgiana Fullerton

... these mysterious allusions, she was there like deaf-mutes who only understand what is said before them by the movement of the lips and the expression of the faces. But it was enough for her to watch her son and Le Merquier to understand what harm one was doing to the other, what perfidious and poisoned meaning fell from this long discourse on the unfortunate man whom one might have believed asleep, except for the trembling of his strong shoulders and the clinching of his hands in his hair, while hiding his face. Oh, if she could ...
— The Nabob • Alphonse Daudet

... old Jacob! you and I must have a tussle. Ha! ha!' exclaimed he, still carrying his cane under his arm, and his hands under his coat tails, 'you must hear a little of what I think. A few words of wholesome advice will do you no harm, and will rub off the rust that old age has ...
— The Knickerbocker, or New-York Monthly Magazine, April 1844 - Volume 23, Number 4 • Various

... rare excellence. A deep spiritual insight enables a religious teacher to shade his meanings where it is required. Deep piety is genius for the pulpit. Mediocrity in native endowments, conjoined with spiritual stolidity in the pulpit, does more harm than all the open apostles of infidelity combined. They take the divinity out of religion and kill the faith of those who hear them. None but inspired men should stand in the pulpit. Religion is not in the intellect merely. The world by wisdom cannot know God. The attempt to ...
— California Sketches, Second Series • O. P. Fitzgerald


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