incapacitate 的定义
in·ca·pac·i·tat·ed, in·ca·pac·i·tat·ing.
- to deprive of ability, qualification, or strength; make incapable or unfit; disable.
- Law. to deprive of the legal power to act in a specified way or ways.
incapacitate 近义词
put out of action
更多incapacitate例句
- A nation’s ability to perceive an attack in real time could be destroyed, if the satellite tracking those movements was also incapacitated or outright eliminated.
- Cases where the guardianship is removed are few and far between, because at that point, the burden is on the person who’s been deemed incapacitated to show the judge that they no longer need a guardian.
- With a flash-bang, the squad could incapacitate enemies temporarily, moving in to disarm and capture.
- Two support cables frame Emily Warren Roebling, an engineer who continued her husband’s work on the Brooklyn Bridge after he was incapacitated.
- The White House sent people with orders “to incapacitate me totally.”
- I used to say under Bush the attempt to incapacitate me, “that one is not yet legal.”
- A few years' knowledge of other countries than our own will not incapacitate me for that part.
- It has been imagined that the plan was to incapacitate him by law for employment, and to hold him a State prisoner.
- Defects of the senses do not incapacitate, if the testator possesses sufficient mind to perform a valid testamentary act.
- He was one of those whom books cannot debilitate, nor a life of study incapacitate for the study of life.
- This was to awe the troops of Count Menard Schomberg, and incapacitate them from fording the river.