0 to cause something to break noisily into a lot of small pieces:
1 to cause something to move with great force against something hard, usually causing damage or injury:
2 to defeat someone or to destroy something completely:
The country's government said it would do whatever was necessary to smash the rebellion.
3 to do much better than the best or fastest result recorded previously:
4 the sound of something being smashed:
6 in tennis or volleyball, a powerful downward hit that sends the ball forcefully over the net
7 an extremely popular and successful song, play, or film:
Her first movie was an international box-office smash.
9 to hit or move with force against something hard, usually causing damage or injury:
10 to defeat or destroy completely:
The government smashed the rebellion.
12 a forcefully hit ball:
Vandals smashed windows and overturned cars in the downtown shopping district.
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).
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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