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Damaging   /dˈæmɪdʒɪŋ/   Listen
verb
Damage  v. t.  (past & past part. damaged; pres. part. damaging)  To occasion damage to the soundness, goodness, or value of; to hurt; to injure; to impair. "He... came up to the English admiral and gave him a broadside, with which he killed many of his men and damaged the ship."



Damage  v. i.  To receive damage or harm; to be injured or impaired in soundness or value; as, some colors in cloth damage in sunlight.



adjective
damaging  adj.  
1.
Causing harm or injury; as, damaging to career and reputation.
Synonyms: detrimental, detrimental to(predicate), prejudicial, prejudicious.
2.
Designed or tending to discredit, especially without positive or helpful suggestions.
Synonyms: negative.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Damaging" Quotes from Famous Books



... get that is to come to the Manor House and talk him into it. For my part, I think, even from his point of view, that it would be better that he should recognise the engagement; nothing can be more damaging ...
— Spring Days • George Moore

... will—he used to be a solicitor, you know, before he started the bucket-shop. When I pulled through, Trip came one day and said he had a job for me. You'll be careful, by-the-bye, not to mention this. The job was to get the City editor of a certain newspaper (a man I know very well) to print a damaging rumour about a certain company. You'll wonder how I could manage this. Well, simply because the son of the chairman of that company was a sort of friend of mine, and the City editor knew it. If I could get the paragraph inserted, Tripcony would—not pay me anything, but ...
— The Whirlpool • George Gissing

... "But more damaging than any other is the criticism which Foxe receives at the hands of Mr. James Gairdner, the fullness of whose knowledge is matched only by the calm judicial manner in which he deals with the martyrologist's stories as he encounters them ...
— Studies from Court and Cloister • J.M. Stone

... forward hugging the walls. The remainder of the body fell back and posted themselves under cover wherever the street offered facilities, and the siege of the house began; the bullets pelted on the front like rattling hail. For nearly ten minutes the fusillade continued without cessation, damaging the stucco, but not doing much mischief otherwise, until one of the men whom the lieutenant had taken with him to the garret was so imprudent as to show himself at a window, when a bullet struck ...
— The Downfall • Emile Zola

... said, to Pau, where he was staying with friends. Finding that he had run out of petrol, while he was passing through Tarbes, he had turned into a side-street to refill without obstructing a main thoroughfare. As he was starting again, an assault had been made—an unprovoked assault—seriously damaging the car. Thereupon he had sent for the police. Now, foiled in their enterprise, the thieves, he understood, were actually daring to say that he had assaulted them. One of them—he nodded at Berry—had certainly been ...
— Jonah and Co. • Dornford Yates


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