Scupper in a sentence as a noun

Of course one mistake could scupper all of this.

That may scupper the clean-install plan for home users with cheap machines.

...The researchers say their findings do not scupper hopes of a vaccine, which may prove more effective than a real infection.

To the executive who gets promoted and leaves a poison chalice behind to scupper his rival.

An engineer can surely plan enough leeway into their deadlines that few hours of github outage doesn't scupper their project

VAT would only scupper them if they were selling BC they had mined themselves, but their talk of trying to set up a bank makes it sound like this isn't the case.

Even a tiny mistake can totally scupper system robustness.

>until Democrats pulled every dirty trick to scupper his campaignYou mean it's the democrat's fault that 20 somethings didn't go vote?

Scupper in a sentence as a verb

FTA: But ultimately, Happes and Oettingen believe that positive fantasies are likely to scupper your [chances] of obtaining your goals.

I say bring on more lawsuits against neonates, foeti and octogenarians - they'll scupper their own cause pretty swiftly as they lampoon themselves.

So there are probably some people who would rather scupper the company in the US rather than give in, would also allow the government to play on that foreign aggression aspect without appearing weak.

And there's certainly something to be said for working through downspots, we all have bad days and quitting just because of some minor irritant that may well pass will scupper your chances of greater happiness in the long run.

Billions of dollars are spent giving people these 'views'.Sanders gave people an opportunity to vote for "those things", and he was the clear favorite to take out Trump - until Democrats pulled every dirty trick to scupper his campaign.

Even existing toothless Regulation might scupper its share value enough to make it an obvious bubble investment -- and people might wake the **** up and start to remember the real value of money, people and privacy again.

An engaged, friendly IT department can help grease the skids for an enterprise sale; a hostile one can scupper it.> ..these organizations are less mature when it comes to understanding "roadmap vision" - they're a lot more aligned to, "What can I do now?

On a re-read, I notice another fundamental flaw: "voting on every issue is too onerous, so voters will assign their votes to someone, a 'politician' to vote for them" -> "a single bad vote will scupper that politician's support".

Scupper definitions

noun

drain that allows water on the deck of a vessel to flow overboard

verb

wait in hiding to attack

See also: ambush bushwhack waylay lurk ambuscade

verb

put in a dangerous, disadvantageous, or difficult position

See also: queer expose endanger peril