jeopardise|jeopardised|jeopardises|jeopardising in English

verb jeopardise (Brit.)

endanger, imperil, put at risk, place in danger; compromise the safety or security of; compromise the success of (also jeopardize)

Use "jeopardise|jeopardised|jeopardises|jeopardising" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "jeopardise|jeopardised|jeopardises|jeopardising" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "jeopardise|jeopardised|jeopardises|jeopardising", or refer to the context using the word "jeopardise|jeopardised|jeopardises|jeopardising" in the English Dictionary.

1. You just jeopardised this whole operation.

2. It can even jeopardise the whole operation.

3. You'll jeopardise the tourist trade if you go around killing people.

4. Synonyms for Adventuring include venturing, braving, risking, daring, imperilling, imperiling, jeopardising, jeopardizing, endangering and gambling

5. The envisaged acceleration of public investment risks jeopardising further fiscal consolidation and macroeconomic stability.

6. However, I shall not permit your aberrations to jeopardise my position.

7. Why would he jeopardise his future by taking unauthorized drugs?

8. In some port areas, the attainment of air quality standards may be jeopardised by ship emissions.

9. These plans should address situations jeopardising pedestrian safety and seek to avoid conflicts between different transport modes

10. In some port areas, the attainment of air quality standards may be jeopardised by ship emissions

11. As manufacturer we cannot stand by and let performance of the dealer agreement be jeopardised by beggar-my-neighbour pricing behaviour.

12. The fallout of ash over parts of Iceland could jeopardise the safety of drinking water.

13. A deteriorating security situation will jeopardise its prosperity—and undermine democracy throughout the region.

14. They shall abstain from any measure which could jeopardise the attainment of the objectives of this Agreement.

15. If anything should jeopardise that freedom - an insurrection for instance - the Church, without hesitation, will condemn it.

16. But he knew it was vital to remember that the evil men who were jeopardising civilisation were also risible little twerps.

17. We want to mobilise and coordinate all the Union's current sources of funding and explore possible alternatives, without jeopardising Member States' budget stability.

18. They shall abstain from any measure which could jeopardise the attainment of the objectives of this Treaty.'

19. Failure to take due regard of this obligation places your patients at risk and may jeopardise your right to practise.

20. It seems unlikely that they will jeopardise their superior circumstances by combining in an alliance with Third World workers against capital.

21. As a result, the rise in fires could jeopardise the long-term success of schemes to reduce emissions from deforestation, they added.

22. Outstanding Spartak have proved themselves the masters of away goals and just one tonight will seriously jeopardise Liverpool's hopes.

23. But this was outside the police remit, and meanwhile, they had to be careful not to jeopardise public tranquillity.

24. Taking part in protests could jeopardise any existing opportunities of securing a decent employment position for those coming up to graduation.

25. He said that the deportations could jeopardise international negotiations aimed at finding a long-term solution to the boat people problem.