1. To attack violently, as with blows or military force; assault.
2. To attack verbally, as with ridicule or censure. See Synonyms at attack.
3. To trouble or beset, as with questions or doubts.
[Middle English assailen, from Old French asalir, asaill-, from Vulgar Latin *assalīre, variant of Latin assilīre, to jump on : ad-, onto; see ad- + salīre, to jump; see sel- in Indo-European roots.]
On the morning after my return from Hampshire I took Marian upstairs into my working-room, and there laid before her the plan that I had matured thus far, for mastering the one assailable point in the life of Sir Percival Glyde.
Although the conversion of collective goods into purely private goods is more attractive, their conversion into club goods is more robust--that is, less assailable.
Democracy is powered by debate and diversity and founded upon a belief in people's assailable right to freedom of speech, worship and assembly - liberties which have been lost or never experienced in much of the world.
Due to these differences, Roby and Maistry (2010) argue that spirituality is biological, psychological, socially evolutional and neurophysiologic where assailable evidence consistent with scientific enquiry cannot be established.
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