0 present participle of obstruct
1 to block a road, passage, entrance, etc. so that nothing can go along it, or to prevent something from happening correctly by putting difficulties in its way:
After the earthquake many roads were obstructed by collapsed buildings.
to obstruct a police investigation
UK He got five years in prison for withholding evidence and obstructing the course of justice.
Consequently, it can be used to successfully fuse function length with any producers with obstructing append calls.
Secondary glaucoma is caused by pathological processes obstructing either the drainage angle (haemorrhage, exudate, tumour) or the pupil (inflammatory adhesions).
Municipal employees sprayed the house with steam, and 'screens' obstructing light and air in the house were burnt.
However, some consumers may actually bypass the obstructing calls and avoid the accumulation of these calls during fusion.
This suggests that a mechanism different from ellipsis must be brought in to explain the obstructing mail example.
The process of obstructing the commission's work was underway.
To mark these calls uniquely, we place a small o subscript on each obstructing function call.
This indirectly prevents the accumulation of obstructing calls during fusion.