cripples

Definition of cripplesnext
present tense third-person singular of cripple
1
2
3

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of cripples These pressures could produce a tsunami that fractures the state’s fiscal foundation, self-inflicts a crisis ultimately demanding drastic cuts, and cripples its competitiveness. Andrew Rein, New York Daily News, 6 Jan. 2026 Scarface and friends attack the lab, and break out the kryptonite that cripples El and Kali. Kelly Lawler, USA Today, 31 Dec. 2025 Second, this ambiguity around responsibility cripples an organization’s ability to respond effectively. Nelson Lim, Fortune, 10 Oct. 2025 Drones allow aggressors to target critical infrastructure that cripples a defender’s economy at low cost and with high accuracy. Omar Al-Ubaydli, semafor.com, 8 Oct. 2025 This inefficiency is invisible during small-scale development tests but completely cripples an application’s performance under the heavy load of a real production environment. Expert Panel®, Forbes.com, 19 Sep. 2025 An ongoing alien siege cripples the world’s militaries, infrastructure, and communication centers but Will can run Premiere Pro, FaceTime, WhatsApp, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, and remote control a Tesla all at the same time. Ct Jones, Rolling Stone, 12 Aug. 2025
Recent Examples of Synonyms for cripples
Verb
  • Lorenzo confronts and incapacitates Pepe, Sonia’s main ally, before facing Sonia herself.
    Isabella Wandermurem, Time, 24 Sep. 2025
Verb
  • Bystander videos, like the ones taken of Pretti, have played a key role for decades in informing the public when law enforcement kills or injures people.
    Ava Berger, NPR, 28 Jan. 2026
  • California law already criminalizes unsafe gun storage in certain situations, including when a child accesses a firearm and injures or kills someone.
    Grant Stringer, Mercury News, 29 Dec. 2025
Verb
  • For example, the curare plant poisons used by South and Central American hunters paralyzes the respiratory system.
    Andrew Paul, Popular Science, 7 Jan. 2026
  • Turning his challenge into a mission and helping others overcome what paralyzes them.
    Isabella Kunde, CBS News, 2 Dec. 2025
Verb
  • The Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office is set to begin training deputies on the Grappler system, a pursuit intervention device that disables a suspect's vehicle by entangling its tires rather than forcing a crash.
    Spencer Wilson, CBS News, 21 Jan. 2026
  • One of the biggest barriers to drones is electronic warfare, which disables drones by severing their connection with the user.
    Brady Knox, The Washington Examiner, 28 Dec. 2025
Verb
  • The meatpacking giant also charges workers when someone takes or damages their personal protective equipment and insists on a three-year agreement, the union said.
    Sam Tabachnik, Denver Post, 5 Feb. 2026
  • To explore that possibility, researchers at University College London and Queen Square Analytics set out to look beyond symptoms and clinical labels and focus instead on the biological signals of how MS damages the brain.
    New Atlas, New Atlas, 4 Feb. 2026
Verb
  • That lesson undermines every company trying to build trust, loyalty and long-term engagement.
    Helmut Paul, Chicago Tribune, 10 Feb. 2026
  • The association is withdrawing as the official facilitator of the White House meeting, saying the partisan approach undermines collaboration.
    Joey Cappelletti, Los Angeles Times, 10 Feb. 2026
Verb
  • The picture exudes both grace and vulnerability, and hints at imperfection by way of a disconcerting, coral-like wrinkle that mars the foot’s heel.
    Chris Wiley, New Yorker, 20 Dec. 2025
  • Deadly holiday weekend mars broad crime drop The back-and-forth followed a Labor Day weekend of deadly violence in Chicago worse than in the previous two years, with seven people shot to death, according to preliminary Chicago Police Department reports.
    Andy Rose, CNN Money, 3 Sep. 2025
Verb
  • When the vortex weakens, that tight circle becomes wavier, akin to how a slow-moving river tends to meander in bends across the landscape, Swain says.
    Andrea Thompson, Scientific American, 9 Feb. 2026
  • In contrast to conventional recycling, which weakens fibers and limits how they can be reused, Uplift360’s non-degenerative method produces material that can go straight back into high-performance supply chains.
    Georgina Jedikovska, Interesting Engineering, 9 Feb. 2026

Browse Nearby Words

Cite this Entry

“Cripples.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/cripples. Accessed 15 Feb. 2026.

More from Merriam-Webster on cripples

Last Updated: - Updated example sentences
Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!