/
ˈsabətɑːʒ/
v.
deliberately destroy or obstruct, especially for political or military advantage.
n.
the action of sabotaging.
History
Sabotage comes from the French verb saboter, which originally meant ‘kick or strike with sabots’, a sabot being a heavy wooden clog. Later it came to mean ‘wilfully destroy’ and was first used in English in the early 20th century, in reference to the wilful destruction by a workforce of their employer's property during a strike.