Hinder or prevent the progress or accomplishment of.
A situation in golf where an opponent's ball blocks the line between your ball and the hole.
1The National Rifle Association is already attempting to stymy a possible background check bill proposed by President Trump.
2David Shanks says again, this is a fair point, but fear of tyranny isn't a valid reason to stymy change.
3He also bemoaned a lack of media diversity that stymies political debate.
4For example, physicists were stymied trying to explain why hot things glowed.
5But the very makeup of federal fishery-management bodies has stymied greater changes.
6Thus, though the weather slowed Gaborn, it had stymied the reavers completely.
7She says she soon felt stymied by the dogma of the church.
8Had it been upheld, it would have stymied Berlusconi's immediate political ambitions.
9Our attempts to get a multiplayer Achievement were stymied time and again.
10Stymied, he'd spent much of the time since about 1670 doing-what ,exactly
11At other times, the choreography seems stymied and forced into two dimensions.
12Forty percent said they've spent three hours or more in stymied traffic.
13If it hasn't produced acorns, he is stymied for the time being.
14And by keeping the yuan artificially low, it is stymying global rebalancing.
15Such airdrops had earlier been stymied by heavy rain and cloud cover.
16But Penn was stymied in his efforts to go negative against Obama.