Endanger in a sentence as a verb

Because, well, while a bug in your task-planer rails app is not cool it most likely won't endanger people's lives.

They were also trained not to make any 'heroic' moves that could endanger themselves or other people.

Removing a site like this will achieve nothing except perhaps endanger some of the sex workers -- think about it.

I'm sorry to spoil the fun here, but if you want to drive a race, rent a race track and don't do it on public streets where you endanger innocents.

I observe the click-click-clickers too and believe they are monumental idiots that not only endanger themselves, but other passengers as well.

For example you could be refused for lack of quality, but you could also be refused because another game in your genre already had shelve space and they didn't want to endanger its dominance.

PG laid out an upper bound, which he later clarifies:"If $3 million a year seems high, remember that we're talking about the limit case: the case where you not only have zero leisure time but indeed work so hard that you endanger your health.

Plus, Arrington's entire schtick as a startup blogger/investor depends on a frothy startup environment, which another dud IPO--namely Zynga--would directly endanger.

Not an explicitly enumerated right in the USA, but a "right" in the same way freedom to walk down the sidewalk is a "right": you're not endangering peoples' lives & it's not explicitly prohibited so you "have a right" to do it.

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.

So I don't think the Guardian needs to clear anything up, they've been quite clear, and even if there were an agreement, I think the Guardian would argue that nothing they have or will publish does endanger 'national security' - it would come down to arguments over the meaning of that term.

Endanger definitions

verb

pose a threat to; present a danger to; "The pollution is endangering the crops"

See also: jeopardize jeopardise menace threaten imperil peril

verb

put in a dangerous, disadvantageous, or difficult position

See also: queer expose scupper peril