Damaging in a sentence as an adjective

Can we please stop with this myth?The State Department itself has said that the cables were "not damaging.

I'm not sure what is more damaging - letting the li-ion battery drop below 70%, or charge it while the laptop is being used.

This type of thinking is extremely toxic and I think can be very damaging for an institutions reputation.

And look, I GET that rogue spreadsheets can turn into productivity-damaging unseen business risks.

Intel says attempting writes in the read-only state could \n cause problems, so the fact that Anvil kept trying to push \n data onto the drive may have been a factor.\n\nOh, I see. Maybe it's to prevent the unwanted writes from damaging the drive.

But it's more of a foreign policy issue, damaging international relations and making it more difficult for countries to trust the US.

Also, random pictures of me programming or reading HN are probably less damaging audio recordings of conversations I might be having.

There were expectations I couldn't live up to, it seemed my family wanted me to be perfect, and the repercussions for not being so were pretty emotionally damaging.

Not a single line of apology to a man's career she ruined, his family's welfare, and damaging influence she's had on female developers and developers in general.

SCotUS has merely become our backup because it's been relatively difficult, particularly in the last 40 years or so, to convince Congress to pass laws that are potentially damaging in any way to the bottom lines of businesses.

He found that, though open offices often fostered a symbolic sense of organizational mission, making employees feel like part of a more laid-back, innovative enterprise, they were damaging to the workers’ attention spans, productivity, creative thinking, and satisfaction.

Damaging definitions

adjective

(sometimes followed by `to') causing harm or injury; "damaging to career and reputation"; "the reporter's coverage resulted in prejudicial publicity for the defendant"

See also: detrimental prejudicial prejudicious

adjective

designed or tending to discredit, especially without positive or helpful suggestions; "negative criticism"

See also: negative