Reverse Dictionary: THWART

ADJECTIVES
1680 — CROSSFUL given to crossing or thwarting → obs.
1930 — BALLOCKSED — BALLOCKSED UP — BOLLIXED ruined, messed up, thwarted, in a muddle → sl.
1950 — KNACKERED thwarted; stopped from doing what one wishes → sl.
1996 FRIAR TUCKED thwarted → UK rhyming sl. for ‘fucked’


NOUNS
1573 — CROSS  a trouble, vexation, annoyance; misfortune, adversity; anything that thwarts or crosses

VERBS
1610 — OPPONE to endeavour to hinder, thwart, or overthrow; to withstand, to resist, to combat; to stand in the way of, to obstruct → obs.
1784 — GET ONE’S LOWING LAID to  have one’s passion quashed; to be thwarted in one’s dreams or desires
1790 — THROW to thwart, to oppose; to dispute, to contradict, to argue; to provoke, to anger → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1818 — NICK to cheat, to trick, to thwart, to get the better of → Sc. 
1865 — BALK to hinder, to prevent, to thwart, to impede → Eng. dial.
1895 — BAFFLE — BOFFLE to impede, to obstruct, to thwart, to balk → Eng. dial.
1897 — TAKE AGAINST to take a dislike to; to thwart → Eng. dial.
1902 — STYMIE to impede, obstruct, frustrate, thwart a person, an activity, etc.
1905 — FLUMMUX to fail, to thwart → Amer. dial. (Bk.)
1905 — QUART to thwart, to go contrary to → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1906 — CRAB THE ACT to spoil things; to thwart someone’s plans; to interfere with someone or something → Amer. sl.
1910 — QUEER THE ACT to interfere, to spoil or thwart someone’s plans → US sl.
1919 — STONKER to render useless; to put of action, to thwart; also, to kill, to destroy; to defeat or outwit → Aust. & NZ sl.
1930 — THROW A KINK INTO to create a difficulty for; to thwart → Amer. sl.
1949 — PUT THE MOCKERS ON to ruin, thwart or jinx → Brit. sl.
1950 — GET SALT to be thwarted, to encounter misfortune → African-American & W. Indies sl.
2005 — COCK-BLOCK to interfere, intrude, or thwart any activity → African-American sl.