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peril | meaning of peril in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English | LDOCE

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishperilper‧il /ˈperəl/ ●○○ noun    1 [uncountable] literary or formalDANGEROUS great danger, especially of being harmed or killedin peril  They put their own lives in peril to rescue their friends.great/grave/serious peril  The economy is now in grave peril.  a voyage that was fraught with peril (=full of danger)2 DANGEROUS[countable usually plural] literary or formal a danger or problem in a particular activity or situation  the perils posed by mountaineeringperil of  the perils of the sea 3 do something at your perilExamples from the CorpusperilGreat perils lay before them, and some of them paid with their lives for drinking that peerless elixir.But Lugar calls nuclear terror the greatest peril of our age.His playoff streak is in peril this season.Mourning can have a therapeutic function that we ignore at our peril.Similarly, lessons from across the world show that early warning signs of conflict are ignored at our peril.The differences exist, and we remain ignorant of them at our peril.Elizabeth continued reading her latest library book, oblivious to my possible peril.None of us who set off on that calm September morning could have foreseen the perils that lay ahead.the perils of a life at seaInto this potent politicization of what remained, at heart, a medical mystery, scientists ventured at their peril.in perilWith food supplies exhausted, two million people are in peril of starving.From Longman Business Dictionaryperilper‧il /ˈperəl/ noun [countable]INSURANCE an event such as a fire which might cause loss and which you can insure againstUnder this policy, guns and firearms are covered for standard perils.Origin peril (1200-1300) Old French Latin periculum