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damage
[dam-ij]
noun
injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness.
The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
Synonyms: lossLaw., damages, the estimated money equivalent for detriment or injury sustained.
Informal., Often damages. cost; expense; charge.
What are the damages for the lubrication job on my car?
verb (used with object)
to cause damage to; injure or harm; reduce the value or usefulness of.
He damaged the saw on a nail.
verb (used without object)
to become damaged.
Soft wood damages easily.
damage
/ ˈdæmɪdʒ /
noun
injury or harm impairing the function or condition of a person or thing
loss of something desirable
informal, cost; expense (esp in the phrase what's the damage? )
verb
(tr) to cause damage to
(intr) to suffer damage
Other Word Forms
- damageability noun
- damagingly adverb
- damaging adjective
- damageable adjective
- damager noun
- damageableness noun
- nondamageable adjective
- predamage noun
- quasi-damaged adjective
- redamage verb (used with object)
- undamageable adjective
- undamaged adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of damage1
Idioms and Phrases
- do one wrong (damage)
- the damage
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The Father Ted co-creator has pleaded not guilty to charges of harassment and criminal damage.
By 4 September the armoured vehicles had moved on, images reviewed by BBC Verify showed, with further damage inflicted on buildings in the area.
Mor Singh, 60, never went to school but his selfless act of handing over his house to the village school - after it was badly damaged due to heavy rains - has made him a local hero.
Doctors advised her to have an abortion because the disease can often damage the unborn child.
The vaccine produces a small, controlled amount of spike protein inside a few cells – just enough to induce an immune response without causing damage.
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