Impair in a sentence as a verb

If you **** yourself trying to execute, you impair your judgement, make it harder to get back on the horse; you may even wind up back at a bigco.

We know some of these flame retardants disrupt thyroid hormones and may impair neurodevelopment.

Unlike most physical diseases, the mental ones often impair your judgement and all this tinfoil hat ******** really isn't helping.

In either case, crowd-management technologies will have to turn away from forms that might in any way impair capital goods production.

Which some industry watchers speculate is partly intended precisely to impair streaming video services.

It suggests a lack of professional competence and will, therefore, impair your ability to land engagements doing professional work.

Would that properly value the exact thing you want to happen – more computer production – or impair it by making it less profitable than other uses of the same talent/capital?

Most studies find that ********* use doesn't actually significantly impair driving ability.

To some extent, the basic appearance is subjective, but if the design choices result in rivers appearing in the text, this will almost certainly impair readability, an objectively worse situation.

Moreover, repeated bouts of diarrhea during childhood permanently impair both physical and cognitive development.

You don't mind if [your] emails are copied to an Agency database and likely never read and because from a technical standpoint it would seriously impair our ability to spy if we couldn't gather everything.

They were wrong in collecting it in the first place.> I am okay with this distinction both because I don't mind if my emails are copied to an Agency database and likely never read and because from a technical standpoint it would seriously impair our ability to spy if we couldn't gather everything.

If you read Apple's motion, they are actually quite upfront about it:"A determination that the Developers are not permitted to use Apples licensed products and services will significantly diminish the value of Apples license rights, impair its relationships with the Developers, and lead to loss of significant revenue from all developers.

The business might not be able to justify keeping one of them around for the year, if for no other reason than their salary would upset the apple cart with other employees, but might still get value out of tactical engagements.+ Employers and employees have an expectation that employees will occasionally have issues which temporarily impair productivity and that this is just the nature of the beast.

Impair definitions

verb

make worse or less effective; "His vision was impaired"

verb

make imperfect; "nothing marred her beauty"

See also: spoil deflower vitiate