Synonym: break up, cut off, interrupt. Similar words: abrupt, rupture, interrupt, corruption, Israeli, up to, gear up, stir up. Meaning: [dɪs'rʌpt] v. 1. make a break in 2. throw into disorder 3. interfere in someone else's activity.
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(31) The Prince is rather easier to keep tabs on, but there is always the unforeseen to disrupt even the best-laid plans.
(32) It does not belong to the basic harmony, which it tends to disrupt.
(33) Korzhakov and his allies may have the resources to disrupt the peace, and with it the election, if they choose.
(34) The construction works on the tunnel would disrupt one of the colony's main breeding grounds.
(35) I refuse to hear anything that might disrupt my own plans.
(36) We erase the memories, disrupt and reconnect the synapses, and use the material for routine calculations.
(37) It seeks to disrupt all aspects of life, from supply lines to social services, using extremely violent methods.
(38) Employee Attitudes to Relocation A lack of knowledge about employees' willingness to move can disrupt the most carefully laid relocation plans.
(39) These proto-oncogenes can apparently cause cancer when something happens to disrupt their normal activities.
(40) To introduce canonised solicitors into the Supreme Court of the universe is to disrupt this system.
(41) But some fear it will cause chaos in the town centre and disrupt local trade.
(42) Flooding schools with teachers in itself solves nothing[sentencedict.com], and may merely disrupt effective solo teaching.
(43) Critics of U.S. aid have questioned whether the White House package could disrupt peace talks.
(44) But Democrats threatened to disrupt the proceedings on welfare reform if the alternative was denied a chance on the floor.
(45) How easy it was for people to disrupt your home and environment, even from distant shores.
(46) We hope the move to Kansas won't disrupt the kids' schooling too much.
(47) Posi has the most womanish ability to choose the worst moments to disrupt a man's thoughts - usually with something trivial.
(48) It seems more likely that the Khmers Rouges decided not to disrupt the election,[http://sentencedict.com/disrupt.html] perhaps for good reason.
(49) But groups representing the disabled are threatening to disrupt the day.
(50) Yet no one walked out of the big top, there were no fundamentalist pickets outside, no attempts to disrupt the service.
(51) She had refused to disrupt an already smoothly running system and he hadn't pressed the point.
(52) Despite the presence of some 37,000 police in the capital, left-wing radicals attempted to disrupt the coronation.
(53) Luke Calder wasn't going to get a chance to disrupt all her plans for the future.
(54) An effective preventive strategy which challenged these interests would seriously disrupt or impose great costs on capitalist producers.
(55) Their brown colouration perfectly matches the decaying leaves around them, their blotches and lines disrupt their outlines.
(56) They employ several drugs, each tailored to disrupt the virus at different stages in its replication process.
(57) For instance, monsoons may disrupt transport and power supplies and may affect the conduct of normal day-to-day business.
(58) Boxing Day frost threat Frost is threatening to severely disrupt the busy Boxing Day programme.
(59) The aim was to disrupt the meeting as much as possible and besiege the centre to prevent the participants from leaving.
(60) However, competing electrode surface reactions and surface film formation can disrupt the surface reaction and reproducible electrochemical transduction may be compromised.
More similar words: abrupt, rupture, interrupt, corruption, Israeli, up to, gear up, stir up, tear up, cover up, clear up, butter up, cheer up, up to now, limber up, add up to, come up to, enter upon, lead up to, look up to, face up to, stand up to, up to date, live up to, scrupulous, voluptuous, measure up to, disc, disk, dish.