to sabotage
Third Person
sabotages
Present Participle
sabotaging
Past Tense
sabotaged
Past Participle
sabotaged
1
to intentionally damage or undermine something, often for personal gain or as an act of protest or revenge
transitive
- The disgruntled employee attempted to sabotage the company's computer system.
- During the war, spies were known to sabotage enemy infrastructure.
- A competitor may try to sabotage a rival company's product launch.
- Sabotaging relationships by spreading rumors is harmful and unfair.
- Sabotaging your own success by procrastination is counterproductive.