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danger
noun
the
possibility
that
harm
,
injury
,
or
damage
may
happen
•
Children
playing
near
the
busy
road
were
in
great
danger
.
Children
playing
near
the
busy
road
were
in
great
danger
.
•
Workers
wear
helmets
to
reduce
the
danger
of
falling
objects
on
the
construction
site
.
Workers
wear
helmets
to
reduce
the
danger
of
falling
objects
on
the
construction
site
.
From
Old
French
danger
,
daunger
,
originally
meaning
"
power
,
jurisdiction
,"
which
evolved
to
"
risk
"
because
people
feared
those
with
power
.
noun
a
person
,
thing
,
or
situation
that
can
cause
harm
or
injury
•
That
broken
step
is
a
real
danger
to
anyone
using
the
stairs
.
That
broken
step
is
a
real
danger
to
anyone
using
the
stairs
.
•
Loose
wires
hanging
from
the
ceiling
posed
hidden
dangers
for
the
maintenance
crew
.
Loose
wires
hanging
from
the
ceiling
posed
hidden
dangers
for
the
maintenance
crew
.
Same
historical
root
as
the
general
sense
,
expanding
from
abstract
risk
to
a
concrete
source
of
harm
.
anger
verb
to
make
someone
feel
angry
•
The
referee's
bad
call
angered
the
fans
.
The
referee's
bad
call
angered
the
fans
.
•
Don't
do
anything
that
might
anger
the
dog
.
Don't
do
anything
that
might
anger
the
dog
.
stranger
noun
-
strange
,
stranger
,
strangest
a
person
you
do
not
know
•
A
stranger
asked
me
for
directions
on
the
street
.
A
stranger
asked
me
for
directions
on
the
street
.
•
Children
are
taught
not
to
talk
to
strangers
.
Children
are
taught
not
to
talk
to
strangers
.
From
Old
French
estrangeor
,
from
estrange
(“
foreign
,
unknown
”).
noun
-
strange
,
stranger
,
strangest
someone
who
is
not
familiar
with
a
place
,
group
,
or
situation
•
Being
a
stranger
in
a
new
city
can
be
exciting
and
scary
.
Being
a
stranger
in
a
new
city
can
be
exciting
and
scary
.
•
As
a
stranger
to
their
customs
,
he
watched
politely
.
As
a
stranger
to
their
customs
,
he
watched
politely
.
Extension
of
the
basic
meaning
'unknown
person'
to
include
unfamiliarity
with
environments
or
experiences
.