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the sabotaging
verb
To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful
Exact(13)
He saw his depression while serving as a sign of his own weakness, the sabotaging of his own dream.
We all hear about breakups: the screaming, the changing of locks, the sabotaging of e-mail accounts.
Inspector General Rajinder Tikoo (who led the negotiations with the kidnappers) confirmed the sabotaging of the talks and that intelligence did not want there to be a resolution.
On Twitter, Indiana's Danny Granger referred to "the sabotaging of the LA/NO trade by david stern" and joked that he would change his name to an unprintable phrase.
The conundrum of "Dr. No," as of all but a handful of the Bond pictures, is as follows: How does a film start out as a thriller — more grounded than outlandish — and wind up as some inflated nonsense about rogue rocketry and the sabotaging of global peace?
But Palmerston defeated Russell's intention of removing him from the foreign office by a famous dusk-to-dawn speech on July 8 , 1850 in which he defended the British bombardment of Athens and the sabotaging of an agreement reached in London with France and Russia over British subjects' claims against Greece.
Similar(47)
3) The "sabotage Mitt" factor.
The "sabotage Mitt" factor.
The sabotage charge, however, seemed unreasonable.
When I asked about the sabotage charge, Walli let loose.
While the sabotage continues, so does the progress.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com