Foiling in a sentence as a noun

They don't. foiling curtain twitchers is as much part of british culture as tea.

But it's just daft to think that returning to the 12m or J-boats has a brighter future than foiling multi-hulls.

I ended up foiling a veteran player's plan to screw me over at the end, leading to a two-way tie between us. It was great!

I would argue that even if these programs were effective in foiling some terrorist plots, that it's still not worth it.

Also important because 'foiling terror plots' may well not be the focus of these programs.

Looks like the Post is appending a query parameter to the url that's foiling your dupe detection.

The more of these types of craft I see, the more I am hoping my kids will be sailing cheap foiling kite dinghies at 20 knots in the next 5 years.

Sounds good to me. Then the FBI can spend less time foiling terrorism plots manufactured by the FBI [1], that are force-fed to incompetent poor people.

Most of the NSA's "foiling" seems to be done via coercing corporations and side-channel attacks.

See the recently intercepted ALQ documents which describe how good the West has gotten at tracking their movements and foiling their plans.

"I don't think it's so unreasonable, in a sense, for someone to feel that, if in fact these efforts are foiling peoples' ability to do us harm, that they're fruitful.

In heavily bureaucratic agencies like the FBI, the only thing that matters is looking good to management by getting arrests and 'foiling plots'.

However, the very recent past indicates that Apple is getting progressively better at foiling jailbreaks.

What I'd probably do is split the problem -- confidentiality of messages can be ensured locally, and directory services, persistence, and foiling traffic analysis on a network service.

Foiling definitions

noun

an act of hindering someone's plans or efforts

See also: frustration thwarting