1. cabal - Noun
2. cabal - Verb
3. Cabal - Proper noun
Tradition; occult doctrine. See Cabala
A secret.
A number of persons united in some close design, usually to promote their private views and interests in church or state by intrigue; a secret association composed of a few designing persons; a junto.
The secret artifices or machinations of a few persons united in a close design; intrigue.
To unite in a small party to promote private views and interests by intrigue; to intrigue; to plot.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThey conspired to overthrow the government Source: Internet
Abe and his cabal have had months to observe the implosion of the rest of the world, seeing them make the same errors of judgement and underestimate the speed at which the virus was able to get a foothold and then take off. Source: Internet
Besides, has he not worked tirelessly, if invisibly, to root out corruption, to expose the sinister plots of the cabal behind the Democratic Party, to remove anthropophagic pedophiles from the upper reaches of the federal bureaucracy? Source: Internet
Anyone baffled by America’s descent into conspiracy mania would get a dark kick out of Hari Kunzru’s latest, featuring an American scholar in Germany who falls down a rabbit hole over an obscure right-wing cabal related to a TV cop reality show. Source: Internet
But the PPP member said the exhortations by Alexander “makes him the unsophisticated chief representative of the rigging cabal within GECOM.” Source: Internet
And a small cabal of useful idiots and media flunkies help. Source: Internet