Advertisement
Advertisement
disrupt
[ dis-ruhpt ]
verb (used with object)
- to cause disorder or turmoil in:
The news disrupted their conference.
- to destroy, usually temporarily, the normal continuance or unity of; interrupt:
Telephone service was disrupted for hours.
- to break apart:
to disrupt a connection.
- Business. to radically change (an industry, business strategy, etc.), as by introducing a new product or service that creates a new market:
It鈥檚 time to disrupt your old business model.
adjective
- broken apart; disrupted.
disrupt
/ 诲瑟蝉藞谤蕦辫迟 /
verb
- tr to throw into turmoil or disorder
- tr to interrupt the progress of (a movement, meeting, etc)
- to break or split (something) apart
Derived Forms
- 诲颈蝉藞谤耻辫迟颈辞苍, noun
- 诲颈蝉藞谤耻辫迟别谤, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 诲颈蝉路谤耻辫迟顎侥谤 诲颈蝉路谤耻辫顎僼辞谤 noun
- 苍辞苍顎卍颈蝉路谤耻辫迟顎僫苍驳 adjective
- 苍辞苍顎卍颈蝉路谤耻辫迟顎僫苍驳路ly adverb
- 耻苍顎卍颈蝉路谤耻辫迟顎侥诲 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of disrupt1
Example Sentences
Earlier this year he was removed from the European Parliament for disrupting a Holocaust memorial ceremony.
Trump, meanwhile, has claimed without evidence that Democrats are "paying a fortune" to disrupt town halls.
鈥淭rump is asserting a particular theory about executive power, but that鈥檚 really all he has,鈥 Ekbladh said, 鈥渁nd that has defined his first hundred days 鈥 disrupt, break, defund.鈥
County workers are poised to walk off their jobs Monday night, disrupting public services from healthcare and social work to libraries and parks.
A Home Office spokesperson said the government were "strengthening international partnerships and boosting our ability to identify, disrupt, and dismantle criminal gangs whilst strengthening the security of our borders."
Advertisement
Related 亚洲网紅露点s
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse