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Bunkers and streams, to golfers
Answer for the clue "Bunkers and streams, to golfers ", 7 letters:
hazards
Alternative clues for the word hazards
Word definitions for hazards in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (plural of hazard English) 2 (context plural only automotive English) (short for hazard lights English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: hazard )
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Hazards is an independent, award-winning occupational safety and health magazine . Published quarterly, it is the trade union recommended magazine for UK union health and safety representatives. Hazards has also jointly developed a NewsWire with LabourStart ...
Usage examples of hazards.
I hasted to take her my reply in my own person, and promised not to neglect her, assuring her that at all hazards she might rely on me.
I then felt prepared for all hazards, and was quite calm, but my unfortunate companion continued to pour forth his groans, and prayers, and blasphemies, for all that goes together at Naples as at Rome.
December 2000 requiring all cell phones sold in the United Kingdom to come with printed warnings of the potential health hazards that wireless technology may pose to children.
FCC and other agencies have designed standards to protect the public against all identified hazards of RF energy.
As long as no ship ventured too far out so that the Great Eastern Current caught them, sea hazards were minimal.
All of them, to one degree or another, had scrapes from underwater hazards and being tumbled against the sandy or rocky abra-siveness of the ocean floor.
It was, he thought to himself, one of the hazards of dealing with a murderer.
Not so with the Pathfinder: his hardy self-devotion had brought him into a situation of unusual exposure, the hazards of which were much increased by the fact that, just as he drifted nearest to the enemy the party on the shore rushed down the bank and joined their friends who still stood in the water.
The soldier or the sailor, so long as he acts under the immediate supervision of a superior, thinks little of the risks he runs, but the moment he feels the responsibility of command, all the hazards of his undertaking begin to associate themselves in his mind: with the chances of success or failure.
Unless he met with one of the hazards Seema had spoken of, he would catch the company long before they completed the final traverse.