What's the difference between
and
harmed
Injury vs Harmed - What's the difference?
injury
|
harmed
|
As a noun
injury
is damage to the body of a human or animal.
As a verb
injury
is (obsolete) to wrong, to injure.
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
Harmed - What does it mean?
harmed
|
|
Insured vs Harmed - What's the difference?
insured
|
harmed
|
As an adjective
insured
is covered by an insurance policy.
As a noun
insured
is a person covered by an insurance policy.
As a verb
insured
is (
insure
).
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
Deleterious vs Harmed - What's the difference?
deleterious
|
harmed
|
As an adjective
deleterious
is harmful often in a subtle or unexpected way (as for example
deleterious'' effects, ''deleterious
to health).
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
Harming vs Harmed - What's the difference?
harming
|
harmed
|
As a verb
harming
is .
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
Harmed vs Damage - What's the difference?
harmed
|
damage
|
As an adverb
harmed
is (
l
).
As a noun
damage
is
injury or harm; the condition or measure of something not being intact.
As a verb
damage
is
to impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction.
Harmed vs Resentful - What's the difference?
harmed
|
resentful
|
As an adverb
harmed
is (
l
).
As an adjective
resentful
is
inclined to resent, who tends to harbor resentment, when.
Stricken vs Harmed - What's the difference?
stricken
|
harmed
|
As a noun
stricken
is knitting or
stricken
can be (
de-form-noun
).
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
Damaged vs Harmed - What's the difference?
damaged
|
harmed
|
As a verb
damaged
is (
damage
).
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
Harmful vs Harmed - What's the difference?
harmful
|
harmed
|
As an adjective
harmful
is of a kind likely to be damaging; injurious.
As an adverb
harmed
is
(
l
).
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