0 past simple and past participle of breach
1 to break a law, promise, agreement, or relationship:
2 to make an opening in a wall or fence, especially in order to attack someone or something behind it:
Occupying intersticial positions between genres, performance venues and levels of cultural artefact, burlesques breached cultural categories within the theatrical world.
It resembles a breached ellipse rather than a typical sector-collapse horseshoe.
We know when a peace agreement has been signed or breached.
However, these extraterrestrial invaders of suburbia have breached humanity's ultimate boundary, that between itself and the universe.
When the territory boundary is breached, males confront the invader with species-typical aggressive displays and threats.
The chorion was breached at a right angle to the membranes to avoid membrane tenting.
The higher the risk that the cap threshold might be breached, the greater the probability that it will play with honesty.
For it is hard to see on this account why compensation should be made for a breached obligation.