sabotage 的 2 个定义
- any underhand interference with production, work, etc., in a plant, factory, etc., as by enemy agents during wartime or by employees during a trade dispute.
- any undermining of a cause.
sab·o·taged, sab·o·tag·ing.
- to injure or attack by sabotage.
sabotage 近义词
damage
incapacitate, damage
更多sabotage例句
- In a briefing on Tuesday, the prime minister said he may introduce measures like price controls to prevent economic sabotage.
- Brittleness requires AI to learn a certain level of flexibility, but sabotage—or “adversarial attacks”—is becoming an increasingly recognized problem.
- However, there is no public information about this terrorist group or about the sabotage attributed to it.
- Machel died in a 1986 plane crash in nearby South Africa, an incident widely believed to have been an act of sabotage by the country’s apartheid government.
- This not only was seen as election sabotage, but it pointlessly jeopardized paychecks, Medicare payments, and deliveries of needed pharmaceuticals to patients.
- Extra security was also set up along the lines to monitor other signs of potential sabotage.
- With Lindsay Lohan, we were watching the horror show of self-sabotage, and grappled with our role in feeding into it.
- Grassroots organizing accompanied an agenda of legislative sabotage led by the Republican congressional hierarchy.
- But was it necessary to try to sabotage her career and her book and spend hours of our own lives trying to make her life hell?
- The Americans and the Israelis have worked to sabotage German gear that Iran has tried to purchase on the black market.
- This was a simple matter when the strikers were guilty of trespass, arson, or sabotage.
- Sabotage places human life—and especially the life of the only useful class—higher than all else in the universe.
- And you can search that book until you are black in the face and you won't find a word in there about sabotage.
- But whether you believe sabotage to be good, bad, or indifferent, really is not vital in this case except as a circumstance.
- Sabotage is as broad and changing as industry, as flexible as the imagination and passions of humanity.'