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- nounharm (noun)
- physical injury, especially that which is deliberately inflicted:"it's fine as long as no one is inflicting harm on anyone else"
- material damage:"it's unlikely to do much harm to the engine"
- actual or potential ill effect or danger:"I can't see any harm in it"
verbharm (verb) · harms (third person present) · harmed (past tense) · harmed (past participle) · harming (present participle)- physically injure:"the villains didn't harm him"
- damage the health of:"smoking when pregnant can harm your baby"
- have an adverse effect on:"this could harm his Olympic prospects"
OriginOld English hearm (noun), hearmian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to German Harm and Old Norse harmr ‘grief, sorrow’.Similar and Opposite Wordsnoun- physical injury, especially that which is deliberately inflicted:
- actual or potential ill effect or danger:
verb- physically injure:
- have an adverse effect on:
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WEBTo harm a person or animal means to cause them physical injury, usually on purpose.
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