0 present participle of clobber
1 to hit someone or something hard and repeatedly:
If you do that again, I'll clobber you (one).
The government is proposing new measures to clobber tax dodgers.
The new supermarket is really going to clobber the small local shops.
2 to defeat completely:
The government clobbered the opposition's proposals.
They have a means of access, even if it is only by my clobbering the authority.
It is not clobbering workers; it is the essence of social democracy.
Any apparently nondescript sentence could mean a clobbering for people anywhere in the country—and we heard quite a few nondescript sentences.
Would not a policy of clobbering savers with an investment surcharge reduce savings and so reduce the pool of available investment capital for manufacturing industry?
Not all of them believe in clobbering 16 to 18-year-olds and their families.
Unlike other private companies, its monopoly position enables it to make good its losses by clobbering the travelling public.
He is more concerned with clobbering the local authorities.
The first is the clobbering that the area has had in the form of unemployment in the past 12 months.