Hobble in a sentence as a noun

That's a roomful of people who came to learn, not to watch you hobble through an offensive routine.

Everyone knows they know what they are doing and only want to help, they don't want to hinder/hobble/mess with it.

But it also is a window into a massive blind spot that could hobble the company.

Bad management can hobble good programmers, but no form of management can make bad programmers write good code.

It's not currently in Apple's interest to hobble 3rd party apps; quite the opposite.

Hobble in a sentence as a verb

We're unintentionally letting culture hobble our chances of success.

Still use Apple's WebKit-based engine required by the App Store developer guidelines This is pretty ********, and should really be looked at by the DoJ. To hobble all web browsers like this is something that even Microsoft, at the height of their dominance, didn't even attempt.

" That explains exactly why I teach in the private sector rather than in the government-operated schools of the United States, which hobble the best teachers and coddle the worst in their employ.

The holier-than-thou crowd expects China to hobble itself with environmental regulations in advance of the US, while developing an economy that is still decades behind.

This leads to the conclusion that Apple is not attempting to hobble stores that undercut them: they simply like using their control of the store ecosystem to maintain the quality, simplicity, and consistency of the experience that allows them to provide to their customers, with the nice side effect of giving them massive leverage over their largest competitors and power over many external markets.

Hobble definitions

noun

a shackle for the ankles or feet

See also: fetter

noun

the uneven manner of walking that results from an injured leg

See also: hitch limp

verb

walk impeded by some physical limitation or injury; "The old woman hobbles down to the store every day"

See also: limp gimp hitch

verb

hamper the action or progress of; "The chairman was hobbled by the all-powerful dean"

verb

strap the foreleg and hind leg together on each side (of a horse) in order to keep the legs on the same side moving in unison; "hobble race horses"

See also: hopple