0 present participle of sabotage
1 to damage or destroy equipment, weapons, or buildings in order to prevent the success of an enemy or competitor:
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.