Disrupt
来自Big Physics
late Middle English: from Latin disrupt- ‘broken apart’, from the verb disrumpere .
wiktionary
Borrowed from Latin disruptus, from disrumpere, commonly dirumpere(“to break or burst asunder”), from dis-, di-(“apart, asunder”) + rumpere(“to break”).
etymonline
disrupt (v.)
"break or burst asunder, separate forcibly." 1650s, but rare before c. 1820, from Latin disruptus, past participle of disrumpere "break apart, split, shatter, break to pieces," from dis- "apart" (see dis-) + rumpere "to break," from PIE root *runp- "to break" (see corrupt (adj.)). Or perhaps a back-formation from disruption. Earlier was disrump (1580s). Related: Disrupted; disrupting.