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molest

verb

  1. to harass, attack, or abuse sexually
L313651 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /məˈlɛst/

verb

Etymology: From Middle English molesten, from Old French molester, from Latin molestō (“to trouble, annoy, molest”), from molestus (“troublesome”), from moles (“a burden, difficulty, labor, trouble”); see mole.

  1. To sexually assault or sexually harass.

    At last he simmered down, choked out his explanations. And the news was indeed enormous. That afternoon, just three hours earlier, his younger sister, Gina, had been molested, debauched, as she crossed a children's playground in the park.

  2. To annoy, trouble, or afflict.

    They have molested the church with needless opposition.

    It was a true sanctuary. Once inside, the Faces were unreachable. Nothing could molest them. They were no longer the oppressed, wretched teen menials who must take orders, toe the line. Here they took command, they reigned.

  3. To disturb or tamper with.