INJURE


Meaning of INJURE in English

in ‧ jure W3 AC /ˈɪndʒə $ -ər/ BrE AmE verb [transitive]

[ Word Family: noun : ↑ injury , the injured; adjective : ↑ injured ≠ UNINJURED , ↑ injurious ; verb : ↑ injure ]

[ Date: 1400-1500 ; Origin: injury ]

1 . to hurt yourself or someone else, for example in an accident or an attack ⇨ wound :

Angus injured his leg playing rugby.

be badly/seriously/critically injured

Two people have been critically injured in an accident.

2 . injure sb’s pride/feelings etc to say unfair or unpleasant things that hurt someone’s pride, feelings etc

REGISTER

In everyday English, people usually say hurt rather than injure :

He hurt his leg playing rugby.

He really hurt my feelings.

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THESAURUS

■ to injure yourself or someone else

▪ hurt to damage part of your body, or someone else’s body:

She slipped on the ice and hurt herself badly.

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Be careful you don’t hurt anyone with that knife.

▪ injure to hurt yourself quite severely, or to be hurt in an accident or fighting:

One of our players has injured his leg, and will be out of the game for weeks.

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Four people have been seriously injured on the Arizona highway.

▪ wound to deliberately hurt someone using a weapon such as a knife or gun:

The gunmen shot and killed twelve people and wounded three others.

▪ maim /meɪm/ [usually passive] to hurt someone very severely, especially so that they lose an arm, leg etc, often as the result of an explosion:

In countries where there are landmines, people are killed and maimed daily.

▪ break to hurt a part of your body by breaking a bone in it:

The X-ray showed that I had broken my wrist.

▪ bruise to hurt a part of your body when you fall on it or hit it, causing a dark mark to appear on your skin:

Cathy fell off her bike and bruised her legs badly.

▪ sprain/twist to hurt your knee, wrist, shoulder etc by suddenly twisting it while you are moving:

I jumped down from the wall and landed awkwardly, spraining my ankle.

▪ strain/pull to hurt one of your muscles by stretching it or using it too much:

When you are lifting heavy loads, be careful not to strain a back muscle.

▪ dislocate to damage a joint in your body in a way that moves the two parts of the joint out of their normal position:

Our best batsman dislocated his shoulder during training.

▪ paralyse [usually passive] to make someone lose the ability to move part or all of their body:

A climbing accident had left him paralysed from the chest down.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.