0 to damage or destroy equipment, weapons, or buildings in order to prevent the success of an enemy or competitor:
1 the act of damaging or destroying equipment, weapons, or buildings in order to prevent the success of an enemy or competitor:
2 to intentionally damage or destroy property:
3 to intentionally damage or destroy something, for example equipment or a system, that belongs to someone else, so that it cannot be used:
4 to intentionally do something that stops someone from achieving what they want or stops something from developing as it should:
5 damage done intentionally to something, for example equipment or a system, that belongs to someone else, so that it cannot be used:
She was not in any way inhibited by the fact that she had sabotaged his exchange rate policy a few days before.
I have given two instances of effective measures against crime that have been impeded, if not sabotaged, by the foolish application of planning regulations.
In point of fact, the bookmakers succeeded in sabotaging it.
Any more certain means of sabotaging an international organisation would be difficult to imagine.
We will recognise that he voted in support of those who sabotaged that agreement.
The proposed policy sabotages the growth of that respect and will undermine the confidence of those running passenger transport executives.
Will the legislation make allowances for a man or an organisation being prevented from sabotaging what should be a good set of regulations?
Their second duty is to maintain their economic strategy and to ensure that it is not sabotaged by local authorities.