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obstruct
[uhb-struhkt]
verb (used with object)
to block or close up with an obstacle; make difficult to pass.
Debris obstructed the road.
to interrupt, hinder, or oppose the passage, progress, course, etc., of.
to block from sight; to be in the way of (a view, passage, etc.).
obstruct
/ əbˈstrʌkt /
verb
to block (a road, passageway, etc) with an obstacle
to make (progress or activity) difficult
to impede or block a clear view of
Other Word Forms
- obstructedly adverb
- obstructer noun
- obstructor noun
- obstructingly adverb
- obstructive adjective
- preobstruct verb (used with object)
- unobstructed adjective
- obstructiveness noun
- obstructively adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of obstruct1
Example Sentences
They will be questioned for obstructing the investigation to locate the painting, according to a judicial official quoted in local media.
“If routine oversight can be obstructed for political reasons, no member of Congress is immune,” he said.
One theory, says Iran expert Andrew Cooper, is that Gaddafi was influenced by Iranian hardliners, alarmed that Sadr was about to obstruct their objectives for the Iranian Revolution.
But the footage released Thursday on the LAPD’s YouTube channel offers only obstructed views of the shooting from several officers on scene, without capturing Flores’ actions in the moments before he was shot.
He was indicted Thursday by a federal grand jury over the March assault and now faces additional assault charges over an alleged December 2023 assault and efforts to obstruct the crime.
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