Imperil in a sentence as a verb

The 3GS didn't imperil the company and neither will this.

Should I not expect to be scrutinized if/when I got caught doing that, because it might imperil my interests?

Non-competes are generally null and void as soon as they go into the contract and could even imperil the entire document.

On most films until now it's been a novelty, used to make a weapon or explosion seem to imperil the audience, or to abuse perspective for comic effect.

> why would anyone in their right mind take the jobNutjobs who want power over others and are willing to imperil themselves to pursue it will continue to become cops.

Our current society already produces so much that scarcity of basic goods need not imperil anybody's survival.

Even if it were medically safe, how would you make sure that people used it in societally acceptable ways and that it didn't imperil the long term genetic pool of the human race ?

It would be unfair to import the negative rhetorical weight of the word theft -- an act that can directly impoverish or even imperil someone -- with what we're talking about.

> Even if it were medically safe, how would you make sure that people used it in societally acceptable ways and that it didn't imperil the long term genetic pool of the human race ?You can't.

The Methodist Board of Church and Society deems it a victim's moral duty to submit to whatever a criminal demands rather than do anything that might imperil a rapist's life.

Without additional context, those "facts" don't significantly imperil any specific worldview.

Indeed, it would promise little reproductive payoff and could be a very dicey strategy because a bad outcome would imperil a woman's future reproduction and the well-being of existing children.

Aereo and its amici dispute those forecasts and make a few of their own, suggesting that a decision in the Networks’ favor will stifle technological innovation and imperil billions of dollars of investments in cloud-storage services.

After all, it would be pretty shitty for a major software company with tens of thousands of employees, many of whom are brilliant, and $2B per month in earnings, to be completely unable to deliver software that does not so imperil users that the general advice is for them to avoid using the products at all.

Imperil definitions

verb

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

See also: endanger jeopardize jeopardise menace threaten peril