1. threat
It's not a threat.
He sees any easiness as a threat to his masculinity, so he always starts games on hard mode and ends up stuck on the first level for days.
There are so many anti-smoking campaigns these days; maybe smoking really is a threat to the public order.
But the Nobel Committee said that poverty was a threat to world peace, and Mother Teresa worked against poverty.
In Ankara, I made clear that America is not – and never will be – at war with Islam. We will, however, relentlessly confront violent extremists who pose a grave threat to our security.
Today young people find themselves, through no fault of their own, living in a world torn by international bitterness and the threat of nuclear destruction.
We must also threaten them with changing the bottom-down to bottom-up approach.
threat = something which can put us in danger
Professor Hawking has said recently that efforts to create thinking machines are a threat to our existence. A threat means something which can put us in danger.
But we all face risks every day by eating, drinking, walking and driving – simply going about our daily lives carries all sorts of unseen threats.
What do we mean by empty threats? By empty threats we mean something that won't really be done.
a life-threatening situation
Even a million Dothraki are no threat to the realm, as long as they remain on the other side of the Narrow Sea.
The team we're playing this weekend is a bit of a threat, but I'm sure we can beat them.
Christopher Columbus's infinite accomplishments are a threat to Google, who do not know how to index infinity when someone searches for "Christopher Columbus".
Angličtina slovo „el peligro„(threat) se zobrazí v sadách:
Social Problems - Problemas SocialesEssay about of identity theft, through computer ha...Fichas del libro - "Genesis A Translated from the ...society and living standardsIntermediate 2 - Unit 82. danger
There's danger that the levee will break. We have to evacuate immediately.
The possibility of suffering harm or injury. A person or thing that is likely to cause harm or injury. Drought is a danger.
Danger ahead.
It is strange that a cameraman heading for a war-zone should not know about the danger of unexploded shells. The newspaper company is being negligent in its training.
I'd stop worrying about it and take some action. The anxiety that comes from doing nothing is worse than any danger you might face.
Many of the world's seven thousand or so languages are spoken only by handfuls of living people and are in danger of extinction.
If the demolition of buildings is uncontrolled, a fine city is in danger of becoming nothing more than a concrete jungle.
According to pernickety moderators, non-sentences constitute a mortal danger to Tatoeba.
There's also the danger of unexploded bombs, so they reported it to the police and the area was taped off to keep people out.
The danger of AIDS came home to me when I saw a documentary film on it last night.
On his return the chaste caresses of his wife amply recompenced the warrior for the fatigues he had undergone and for the danger which he had been exposed.
Are you creating for us a future world where there is a greater danger of skin cancer, weakened bodies, less food and fewer plants and animals?
If you're with me as a staff officer then I need you to bring a sense of danger with you to your work.
Angličtina slovo „el peligro„(danger) se zobrazí v sadách:
1000 most important Spanish nouns 151 - 200Social Problems - Problemas SocialesSocial problems - Problemas socialesAbstract objects (english-spanish)ESP nouns (751-1000)