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Incur   /ɪnkˈər/   Listen
Incur

verb
(past & past part. incurred; pres. part. incurring)
1.
Make oneself subject to; bring upon oneself; become liable to.
2.
Receive a specified treatment (abstract).  Synonyms: find, get, obtain, receive.  "His movie received a good review" , "I got nothing but trouble for my good intentions"



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Incur" Quotes from Famous Books



... too, in a manner of speaking, a probationer. To do his duty strictly, wisely, and well on this voyage would certainly entitle him to no step, not even perhaps to praise; but to neglect it, or even to be unfortunate, would cause him to incur the displeasure of the ...
— As We Sweep Through The Deep • Gordon Stables

... the consent of their parents to make an expedition of their own. Two guides were secured who were familiar with the entire region and two strong skiffs were purchased. In these boats the boys had planned to follow a part of the dangerous Colorado River. They had no desire to incur the perils that belonged to many of its swirling rapids and tossing waters. In other places, however, the river was comparatively safe and there the boys planned to follow the course of the stream with their strong and heavy ...
— The Go Ahead Boys and Simon's Mine • Ross Kay

... us to bless and curse not? Pray for your father, then, I repeat, that he incur not the malediction he has announced on you; since he has broken, as you see, a command truly divine; while you, by obeying that other precept which enjoins us to pray for them that persecute and curse us, will turn the curse into ...
— Clarissa, Volume 3 (of 9) • Samuel Richardson

... things are not necessary to human happiness: it is possible to do without them and yet not "suffer." Even if Goldsmith had given half of his substance away to the poor, there was enough left to cover all the necessary wants of a human being; and if he chose so to order his affairs as to incur the suffering of debt, why, that was his own business, about which nothing further needs be said. It is to be suspected, indeed, that he did not care to practise those excellent maxims of prudence and frugality which he frequently preached; ...
— Goldsmith - English Men of Letters Series • William Black

... sent as soon as they were ready. There were greater obstacles in the way than she, in her inexperience, was aware of. The laws of Georgia restrained humane impulses by forbidding the manumission of a slave. Consequently, he must either incur very undesirable publicity by applying to the legislature for a special exception in this case, or she must be manumitted in another State. He would gladly have managed a journey without the company of his wife, if he could thereby have regained ...
— A Romance of the Republic • Lydia Maria Francis Child


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