Synonym: break, commotion, dislocation, disturbance, flutter, gap, hoo-ha, hoo-hah, hurly burly, interruption, kerfuffle, perturbation, to-do. Similar words: disrupt, eruption, corruption, interruption, option, caption, adoption, inception. Meaning: [-pʃn] n. 1. an act of delaying or interrupting the continuity 2. a disorderly outburst or tumult 3. an event that results in a displacement or discontinuity 4. the act of causing disorder.
Random good picture Not show
91. Indeed, warding off disruption is the principal property of complex systems.
92. As a result they are less willing to accept the increasing costs caused by disruption and seek to recover them through claims.
93. No one should shoot up drugs because addiction, poor health, family disruption, emotional disturbances and death could follow.
94. The revolution of February 1917 further aggravated this situation and brought about disruption of industry.
95. Cell disruption was checked at microscopy. Protein content was determined by Lowry's method.
96. This will cause economic disruption comparable with a hike in oil prices or interest rates.
97. The formal disruption is itself the visible manifestation of the political demand.
98. The Furus, after the recent prolonged disruption of their marioc supply, have lost their craving for the drug.
99. Breaking of a habit, or the disruption of a routine, can cause the horse considerable distress.
100. It is a tribute to the hard work of soft ware professionals that large-scale disruption was avoided.
101. The symptoms of jet lag result from a temporary disruption of these rhythms.
102. In both instances a massive disruption to trade and capital flows took place.
103. Can officials always restrict symbols that might lead to disruption?
104. Numerous statistical studies find negative effects of family disruption on outcomes for children.
105. To support such action, officials would have to show that the publications caused or would probably cause substantial and material disruption.
106. For sure she creates disruption, signifies abnormality, and incites lewdness in others.
107. The move was signalled last week and, true to their promised response, management suspended the workers involved in the disruption.
108. We thought this decision would produce the least harm and disruption to residents.
109. A further wave of strikes caused similar disruption on Feb. 6.
110. This was achieved through a carefully planned programme of voluntary redundancies and with no manufacturing disruption or imbalance to the skill mix.
111. There was severe disruption to the gas, water and electricity supplies; the schools had all but disappeared.
112. Higher education had only just resumed with some semblance of normality after the disruption of the previous decade.
113. Later more imaginative tactics were adopted to try to achieve maximum disruption for a small loss of earnings.
114. Some parents moved their children to rural areas to avoid the disruption and continue their schooling.
115. The movement of earthworms throughout layers can also cause a great deal of disruption, blurring the divisions.
116. The disruption caused by a second spell in which roads and pavements are dug up would be too great.
117. No radioactivity was detected, and there was no disruption of aircraft electronics.
117. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and build good sentences.
118. Massive soil erosion and disruption of the natural drainage pattern destroyed the land's productivity.
119. Public sector workers tried to hit at the state with minimum disruption of services to consumers.
120. Second, governments have desired to avoid the politically damaging disruption of the network by industrial action.
More similar words: disrupt, eruption, corruption, interruption, option, caption, adoption, inception, misrepresentation, perception, reception, deception, exception, exemption, assumption, absorption, conception, encryption, apperception, captivation, exceptional, consumption, presumption, description, prescription, exceptionally, misconception, erupt, circumscription, abrupt.