1 to bang into very hard -- slå
3 (sometimes with up) to (cause to) break in pieces or be ruined -- knuse, smadre
4 to strike with great force; to crash -- krasje mot, brase inn i
A man does not smash the portrait of his beloved in order to express his anger (unless he is posturing).
To accomplish this, she produces an oh-prefaced, epistemically upgraded assessment: oh they were smashing.
In another section of this work, the fly is allegorically pursued by a book in an attempt to smash it (23:15-24:39).
Selfish, splendid, disdainful, wilful and difficult, she survives when the sweet martyr collapses and the performing doll is smashed.
During one particular storm the vessel shipped a very heavy sea that smashed the gangway and a lifeboat aft, and snapped off ventilators.
In expressions, '+' denotes addition, '-' denotes proper subtraction, and '#' denotes the smash function.
This collusion required little union participation and in some cases permitted collusion to smash unions.
It is easier to smash the old stories than to tell new, better ones.
中文繁体
打碎, 打碎,摔碎, 猛烈移動…
More中文简体
打碎, 打碎,摔碎, 猛烈移动…
MoreEspañol
hacer(se) pedazos, destrozar(se), romper…
MorePortuguês
estilhaçar…
More日本語
~を粉々に砕く, 粉々にする…
MoreTürk dili
ezmek, paramparça etmek, kırıp parçalamak…
MoreFrançais
(se) casser, (se) briser, (se) fracasser…
MoreCatalan
esmicolar(-se), destrossar(-se)…
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