The quality or state of being capable of being disrupted or interrupted.
Formed from 'disrupt' (from Latin disruptus, past participle of disrumpere: dis- 'apart' + rumpere 'to break') plus the suffix '-ability' (from Latin -abilitas). The word became increasingly common in business and technology contexts in the late 20th century.
In Silicon Valley, 'disruptability' has become a key metric—investors actually measure how vulnerable established companies are to disruption, turning a word that describes vulnerability into a measure of market opportunity!
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.