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28 Sentences With "run a risk"

How to use run a risk in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "run a risk" and check conjugation/comparative form for "run a risk". Mastering all the usages of "run a risk" from sentence examples published by news publications.

So Warren does run a risk by not playing the game.
I think that they run a risk of having Trump re-elected.
Mueller might run a risk if he pursues Prince — or anybody else — who is suspected of lying to Congress.
But this story has less to do with the future than the past, and both parties run a risk in misreading it.
But such transplants are complex, expensive and highly risky to the patients, who would run a risk of dying in the process.
"If Japan is going to cut prices so much, I think Japan will really run a risk of losing its current position," he said.
As long as viruses keep escaping the lab — in freak accidents, fires, explosions, equipment malfunctions, and human mistakes — we run a risk of catastrophe.
But they also do run a risk of alienating a lot of independent-minded voters in some of those states that Hillary Clinton lost in 2016.
Research has shown that people who fail to find work early in their lives run a risk of being unemployed and underemployed into early adulthood and beyond.
"Any split would see Renault run a risk of significant obsolescence," he added, arguing Nissan and Mitsubishi have more advanced research and are further ahead in electric vehicles.
But, in their efforts to protect the president (who finally seems to have grasped the virus's full dangers), the Gateway Pundit, One America News Network, and Fox News run a risk.
Sometimes, you might run a risk in the hope that the return will justify the danger: eating one more doughnut, for example, or sledding down the biggest hill in the neighborhood.
"Don't you run a risk where you are actually bordering on censorship of the media?" said Richard Mugisha, the lawyer who filed the case on the behalf of the Rwandan Journalists Association.
Although it's true that Ashkenazi Jews have an especially high risk of carrying a mutation (the rate is estimated to be one in 2424), people of all racial backgrounds run a risk.
As Internet companies respond through rapid-response, monitoring, curating, commenting and collaborating, they run a risk of undermining one of the most basic tenants of the internet: internet operators' responsibility for third party's content.
Firstly, unless the human meat you eat is properly cared for, you run a risk for catching blood-borne diseases like hepatitis and ebola — on top of an infection risk from gut bacteria like E-coli.
What matters is that when your iPhone has hardware in it that Apple didn't make or authorize, you run a risk of it not working with Apple's software — regardless of whether Apple had malicious intent or not.
The NRC confirmed that the 227 bolts, plus an additional 50, have now been replaced, that the company is working to retrieve the bolt caps, and that it will run a risk assessment if they cannot be fished from the reactor.
These petty arrests don't make the public safer, while defendants who get sucked into the justice system on low-level charges can have trouble getting jobs, attending school or entering the military, and run a risk of long-term entanglement with the law.
Why it matters: Although presumably users' financial information and passwords do not seem to be at risk in this breach, as the app said it doesn't store either of these, dating apps run a risk of leaving users' most intimate communications vulnerable to privacy breaches.
Hickenlooper maintained that stance Thursday morning on AM to DM. "From my point of view, I think Democrats do run a risk if we stay too far to the left," he said, arguing that swing states like Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan will not go along with giving up their private insurance.
Bruen said the response should involve tracking what's going on in China and other adversarial countries, developing defensive capabilities to fight back against disinformation campaigns when they start, and the US government potentially considering offensive campaigns to warn Chinese President Xi Jinping or Russian President Vladimir Putin that they run a risk of the US striking back publicly.
First of all -- first of all, I think that Google has an obligation to have some system of fixing things like this and being able to do within a couple of hours and I do think they run a risk that they&aposre going to start getting hearings if in fact this is used as an engine of left-wing propaganda, people are going to demand I think real reform.
These ascents involve active swimming and no feeding, with the lowest ascent rate occurring below the depth of lung collapse, which does not seem likely to help prevent bubble formation, and by current models of nitrogen diffusion, may increase risk of decompression sickness. Analysis by Tyack et al. (2006) does not suggest that the beaked whales run a risk of decompression stress and embolism during normal diving behaviour. Houser et al.
In an international context, many emerging market governments are unable to sell bonds denominated in their own currencies, and therefore sell bonds denominated in US dollars instead. This generates a mismatch between the currency denomination of their liabilities (their bonds) and their assets (their local tax revenues), so that they run a risk of sovereign default due to fluctuations in exchange rates.Eichengreen and Hausmann (2005), Other People's Money: Debt Denomination and Financial Instability in Emerging Market Economies.
An important part of the game is the idea of sustainability, which Rohrer discussed by email with Matthew Gault, writing in Vice Motherboard. Because villages run a risk of overexploiting their surroundings, successful communities require good resource management. Rohrer describes this as necessitated by the game's high difficulty, which is reinforced by repeated failure: all villages will die eventually, but the societies supporting cooperation and sustainability are able to survive longer. Over time, players have become better at continuing family lines, which Rohrer attributes to the emergence of culture, morality and taboos supporting these ideas.
If researchers go without randomization and turn a blind eye to those possible alternative factors, they fundamentally run a risk to falsely credit the feeding method for effects of socioeconomical factors.; A loophole from this problem was first presented by Cynthia G. Colen (Ohio State University), who successfully factored out socioeconomical determinants by comparing siblings only; her study demonstrated that formula fed children showed only minimal differences to their breastfed siblings, insofar as their physical, emotional and mental thriving was concerned. William Sears' assumptions about the benefit of breastfeeding for the attachment have been studied. In 2006, John R. Britton and a research team (Kaiser Permanente) found that highly sensitive mothers are more likely than less sensitive mothers to breastfeed and to breastfeed over a long time period.
Volenti non fit iniuria (or injuria) (Latin: "to a willing person, injury is not done") is a common law doctrine which states that if someone willingly places themselves in a position where harm might result, knowing that some degree of harm might result, they are not able to bring a claim against the other party in tort or delict. Volenti applies only to the risk which a reasonable person would consider them as having assumed by their actions; thus a boxer consents to being hit, and to the injuries that might be expected from being hit, but does not consent to (for example) his opponent striking him with an iron bar, or punching him outside the usual terms of boxing. Volenti is also known as a "voluntary assumption of risk". Volenti is sometimes described as the plaintiff "consenting to run a risk".

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