sabotage
See also: Sabotage
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈsæ.bəˌtɑːʒ/, /ˈsæ.bɒˌtɑːʒ/, (less commonly) /sæ.bɒˈtɑːʒ/, /ˈsæ.bɒˌtɪd͡ʒ/[1][2]
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈsæb.əˌtɑʒ/, /ˌsæb.əˈtɑʒ/[3]
Noun
sabotage (usually uncountable, plural sabotages)
- A deliberate action aimed at weakening someone (or something, a nation, etc) or preventing them from being successful, through subversion, obstruction, disruption, and/or destruction.
Derived terms
Translations
deliberate action of subversion, obstruction, disruption, destruction
|
Verb
sabotage (third-person singular simple present sabotages, present participle sabotaging, simple past and past participle sabotaged)
- To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful.
- The railway line had been sabotaged by enemy commandos.
- Our plans were sabotaged.
- 2014 October 18, Paul Doyle, “Southampton hammer eight past hapless Sunderland in barmy encounter”, in The Guardian:
- Five minutes later, Southampton tried to mount their first attack, but Wickham sabotaged the move by tripping the rampaging Nathaniel Clyne, prompting the referee, Andre Marriner, to issue a yellow card. That was a lone blemish on an otherwise tidy start by Poyet’s team – until, that is, the 12th minute, when Vergini produced a candidate for the most ludicrous own goal in Premier League history.
- 2021 December 29, Drachinifel, 21:03 from the start, in The USN Pacific Submarine Campaign - The Dark Year (Dec'41 - Dec'42), archived from the original on 19 July 2022:
- The only amusing highlight was Gudgeon having managed to exploit U.S. codebreaking efforts to ambush and destroy the submarine I-173, albeit not for the lack of the Mark 14's trying to sabotage the effort, as the torpedo that had hit the sub had refused to detonate; it seemed, however, that the car-crash levels of kinetic energy involved in the dud simply ramming the sub had nonetheless done enough to fatally damage it.
Derived terms
Translations
deliberately destruct to prevent success
|
See also
References
- The Chambers Dictionary, 9th Ed., 2003
- “sabotage”, in Collins English Dictionary.
Anagrams
Danish
Declension
Declension of sabotage
common gender |
Singular | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | sabotage | sabotagen | sabotager | sabotagerne |
genitive | sabotages | sabotagens | sabotagers | sabotagernes |
Further reading
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /saːboːˈtaːʒə/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: sa‧bo‧ta‧ge
- Rhymes: -aːʒə
Descendants
- → Indonesian: sabotase
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sa.bɔ.taʒ/
Audio (file) - Homophone: sabotages
- Hyphenation: sa‧bo‧tage
Descendants
- → Catalan: sabotatge
- → Czech: sabotáž
- → Danish: sabotage
- → Dutch: sabotage
- → English: sabotage
- → Galician: sabotaxe
- → German: Sabotage
- → Hungarian: szabotázs
- → Italian: sabotaggio
- → Polish: sabotaż
- → Portuguese: sabotagem
- → Romanian: sabotaj
- → Russian: сабота́ж (sabotáž)
- → Spanish: sabotaje
- → Swedish: sabotage
- → Turkish: sabotaj
Further reading
- “sabotage”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Swedish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sabʊˈtɑːɧ/
Audio (file)
Declension
Declension of sabotage | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | sabotage | sabotaget | sabotage | sabotagen |
Genitive | sabotages | sabotagets | sabotages | sabotagens |
Further reading
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.