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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Harmed

Harm \Harm\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Harmed (h[aum]rmd); p. pr. & vb. n. Harming.] [OE. harmen, AS. hearmian. See Harm, n.] To hurt; to injure; to damage; to wrong.

Though yet he never harmed me.
--Shak.

No ground of enmity between us known Why he should mean me ill or seek to harm.
--Milton.

Wiktionary
harmed

vb. (en-past of: harm)

WordNet
harmed

adj. having had pain or loss or suffering inflicted

Usage examples of "harmed".

Since my subject is 'Ideas that have Harmed Mankind,' it is especially harmful systems of beliefs that I shall consider.

He shouldn't have been harmed, unless he was being careless—leaving the ship without checking radiation levels?

If you will give permission, and the assurance that they will not be harmed, I will ask them to land.

Fortunately, all the food had been prepared in bite-sized portions, was easily chewed and swallowed, or was fruit that wouldn't be harmed if it got wet.

He felt that, considering the large contingent of armed men which Fax had around him, they had been lucky indeed not to be harmed - except in pride and dignity.

All she could do was try to prevent him from doing so much that he harmed himself, and soothe his muscles at the end of every workout with massages and sessions in the whirlpool.

Until then she couldn't be assured that she hadn't harmed him by making the decision to keep him hidden.

But if Joe had been harmed because of him, she would have killed him herself.

Madelyn had never before thought of herself as vindictive, but she felt that way about anyone who had ever harmed Reese.

No matter how nasty Jessie had been, no matter what she'd said or even if she'd attacked him with a poker or something, he wouldn't have harmed her.

She had gone into places where armed men would have hesitated to go, talked to thugs and drug addicts, thieves and murderers—and for some reason, though none of them had given her any real information, neither had they harmed her.

There was only one who had harmed him and gotten away with it, and the knowledge was a bitter little knot in the pit of his stomach, a knot he lived with every day.

She knew she literally wouldn’t be able to bear it if anyone in her family was harmed because of her, be­cause of what she was.

He had harmed Joan out of spite, not malice, because Julius Berenford-and Linden herself-had made him feel emasculated after Covenant's murder.

For reasons which I do not grasp, the storm's violence harmed only our homes.