rupt-, -rupting, -ruption
(Latin: break, tear, rend; burst)
eruptive
eruptively
incorrupt
1. Free of corruption or immorality; incorruptible.
2. Free of errors or faults.
3. Not vitiated by errors or alterations.
4. Not decayed; unspoiled.
incorruptibility
incorruptible
1. Incapable of being morally corrupted, especially incapable of being bribed or motivated by selfish or base interests.
2. Not subject to decomposition; incapable of being affected by decay or decomposition.
incorruptibly
incorruption
incorruptly
incorruptness
1. Free from corruption.
2. Not defiled or depraved; upright or honest.
3. Free from error.
4. Not affected with decay.
interrupt
1. To cause or to make a break in the continuity or uniformity of (a course, process, condition, etc.).
2. To break off or cause to cease (stop), as in the middle of something: "He interrupted his work to answer the bell."
3. To stop (a person) in the midst of doing or saying something; especially, by an interjected remark: "May I interrupt you to comment on your last remark?"
interrupter
interruption
1. An act or instance of interrupting.
2. The state or action of being interrupted.
3. Something that interrupts.
4. Cessation; intermission.
interruptive
interruptively
irrupt
1. To break or burst in suddenly.
2. To manifest violent activity or emotion; such as, a group of persons.
3. A reference to animals that increase suddenly in numbers through a lessening of the number of deaths.
Related break, broken-word units:
clast-;
frag-.