Detriment in a sentence as a noun

It appears, though, that they gambled and lost and not without detriment to themselves.

Some consider this a credit, some a detriment, but no matter what I consider it to be a huge technical challenge.

To the detriment of their own working conditions, because you are a consumer for a few hours at most, but you are an employee most of your day.

Because there are no children, because there are no marriages, because marriages are nowadays too fast and detrimental for male parties.

Practically every company I do business with resells my data in some way, to their benefit and my detriment.

" When there's only one competitor, we become less forgiving because monopoly power has been levied against us in the past to our detriment.

You come up with only a single, high level reason for what could have thousands of reasons, and you seriously come up with one that is a detriment to our entire species.

60 millions is pocket change for them, but the precedent this sets will endanger their business in many countries where press is dying and abusing their power to force governments to pass laws that will benefit their old business models very much to the detriment of Google.

Any student of economics who understands the concept of Pareto efficiency should understand that any action which causes an overall detriment to the economy or the society at large cannot lead to sustainable profits for the company involved.

That's a serious crimp on innovation, costs the customers and developers, and guarantees that Apple has a stranglehold on a huge emerging market and collects a vig on every transaction, to the detriment of competitors of theirs like Amazon and customers who just want to buy a book in their kindle app.

Detriment definitions

noun

a damage or loss

See also: hurt