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verb

disrupt

dihs-RUHPT
verb
1
To throw a process, system, or situation into confusion by interrupting its normal flow.
"A power cut disrupted production at the factory for two days."
"Protesters disrupted the meeting by shouting from the back of the room."
2
To radically change an industry or market by introducing a better or cheaper way of doing things.
"Streaming services disrupted the way people watch television."
"The startup hopes to disrupt the taxi industry with its app."

How to Use Disrupt

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo break up something that was running smoothly, or to shake up an entire industry with a new way of doing things.

Easily confused with
Common pairings
disrupt the market disrupt a meeting disrupt supply chains

Word Forms

more disrupt comparative, disrupted past tense, disrupts singular, most disrupt superlative

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A power cut _____ production at the factory for two days.

Etymology

From Latin disrumpere, "to break apart," from dis- ("apart") + rumpere ("to break") — the same root gives us "rupture."

Definitions: FreeDict original editorial