sabotage
柯林斯词典
1. V-T If a machine, railway line, or bridge is sabotaged, it is deliberately damaged or destroyed, for example, in a war or as a protest. 蓄意破坏[usu passive]
The main pipeline supplying water was sabotaged by rebels. 主供水管道被叛乱分子故意破坏了。
2. N-UNCOUNT Sabotage is also a noun. 蓄意的破坏
The bombing was a spectacular act of sabotage. 这次爆炸是一次惊人的蓄意破坏行为。
3. V-T If someone sabotages a plan or a meeting, they deliberately prevent it from being successful. 阻挠
He accused the opposition of doing everything they could to sabotage the election. 他指责反对派正在竭尽全力阻挠选举的进行。
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sabotage /ˈsæbəˌtɑːʒ/ (sabotaging,sabotaged,sabotages)
剑桥词典
- to damage or destroy equipment , weapons , or buildings in order to prevent the success of an enemy or competitor
(为阻止敌人或对手成功而)毁坏,破坏(设备、武器或建筑物)
The rebels had tried to sabotage the oil pipeline . 叛乱分子曾试图破坏输油管道。
to intentionally prevent the success of a plan or action
阴谋破坏,蓄意破坏(计划或行动)
This was a deliberate attempt to sabotage the ceasefire . 这是一次蓄意破坏停火的行为。 返回 sabotage