• We work to make you whole again. We made it easier than ever for anyone to get the legal care they need when it comes to their injury. Recover lost wages.
  • mid-15c., "do an injustice to, dishonor," probably a back-formation from injury, or else from Old French injuriier "to damage; offend," from Latin iniuriari "do an injury...
  • site: media | arena: nba | pageType: injuries | section: | slug: | sport: basketball | route: player_injuries_by_team | 6-keys: media/spln/nba/reg/free/injury.
    • Hikers need to take sensible precautions to prevent injury.
    • She's concerned about the risk of injury to her reputation.
    • The team has been weakened by illness and injury.
  • From Middle English injurie, from Anglo-Norman injurie, from Latin iniūria (“injustice; wrong; offense”), from in- (“not”) + iūs, iūris (“right, law”). Doublet of injuria. Pronunciation.
  • 1. Damage or harm done to or suffered by a person or thing: escaped from the accident without injury; a scandal that did considerable injury to the campaign.
  • driver escaped serious injury although the car was badly damaged in the impact.(10) the possible injury to the feelings of others(11)...
  • nonaccidental injury n (Social welfare) damage, such as a bruise, burn, or fracture, deliberately inflicted on a child or an old person, (Abbrev.)
  • INJURY (noun) The noun INJURY has 5 senses: 1. any physical damage to the body caused by violence or accident or fracture etc. play.
  • Injury definition: harm or damage that is done or sustained. See examples of INJURY used in a sentence.