So for example, prior to 2016, you couldn’t even stream Netflix without interruption.
Podcast: How a 135-year-old law lets India shutdown the internet|Anthony Green|September 2, 2020|MIT Technology Review
Instead, interruptions have been the norm — usually because of fouls.
The Suns And Mavs Shouldn’t Have Surprised Us … But We Didn’t See T.J. Warren Coming|Chris Herring (chris.herring@fivethirtyeight.com)|August 5, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
Of the 125 patients described fully, 77 experienced an interruption of blood flow in the brain, most often caused by a blood clot in the brain.
Strokes and mental state changes hint at how COVID-19 harms the brain|Laura Sanders|June 25, 2020|Science News
The incident with Tony Kornheiser, a Pardon the Interruption talking head, serves to highlight the problem with ESPN.
ESPN: The Worldwide Leader in Pricks|Marlow Stern|July 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST
One morning in the middle of this quiet ritual–reading and prayer–I felt a sense of interruption.
Joshua DuBois’s Daily Devotionals for Obama Are Now a Book|Joshua DuBois|October 13, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Spitzer rolled his eyes at the interruption, grumbling a perfunctory “very funny.”
Eliot Spitzer Mobbed by Press, Heckled at First Campaign Stop|David Freedlander|July 9, 2013|DAILY BEAST
I have published online with seldom more than a day or two of interruption continuously since October 2002.
Murray Bernard Frum, 1931–2013|David Frum|May 28, 2013|DAILY BEAST
But Obama, in command, feeling comfortable, laughed off the interruption, and dismissed the trouble.
Obama In Israel: He Came, He Spoke, They Swooned|Gil Troy|March 22, 2013|DAILY BEAST
The buzzer's insistent voice brought her to her feet, even while she frowned at the interruption.
Personality Plus|Edna Ferber
Henning felt that, for some reason or other, his cousin had made the interruption.
'As Gold in the Furnace'|John E. Copus
These interviews were the only interruption to the dulness of their garrison life.
Frederick The Great and His Family|L. Muhlbach
She had been smiling at the officer, but on the interruption of the strangers' entrance she frowned with annoyance.
A Soldier of the Legion|C. N. Williamson
I had a sudden desire, awakened by Arten's interruption, to share the emotions called up by the surrounding scene.
By Desert Ways to Baghdad|Louisa Jebb
British Dictionary definitions for interruption
interruption
/ (ˌɪntəˈrʌpʃən) /
noun
something that interrupts, such as a comment, question, or action
an interval or intermission
the act of interrupting or the state of being interrupted