sabotaging Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈsæb.ə.tɑːʒ]
  • Us [ ˈsæb.ə.tɑːʒ]

Meaning of sabotaging In English

More Definitions of sabotaging

Examples of sabotaging

  • Local actors play a far more complex role than the conventional image of troublemakers sabotaging reform as assumed in the dualistic account.

  • According to this perspective, maltreatment can compromise children in their negotiation of stage-salient developmental tasks, thus sabotaging subsequent adaptation.

  • Maltreatment can compromise children in their negotiation of stagesalient developmental tasks, thus sabotaging subsequent adaptation.

  • Less surprising is that the leadership regularly blamed 'counter-revolutionary elements ' for 'infiltrating ' the collective farms and 'sabotaging ' production and procurements.

  • These changes notwithstanding, there is plenty of evidence that bureaucrats are resisting + and even sabotaging + these changes by refusing, for example, to disclose information relating to shingikai deliberations.

  • Today, too, we must stress that the government should realise that it should stop interfering with, and sabotaging, the opposition.

  • We are sabotaging the local basis of electronic communications, and this order will do nothing to stop that process.

  • Many employees of local authorities are, in fact, sabotaging the campaign.

More Examples of sabotaging

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May 10, 2021

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