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: --
In figure 5 we define our semantic domains, using coalesced sums and smash products.
At 7 a. m. on the 4th an enormous wave swept the deck, smashing and carrying away everything in its path.
The word smashed was therefore included in the analysis.
The guardians of morals accordingly smashed and burned the latest rock 'n' roll singles in public.
Sherds from spatially separate areas in these deposits often fit together, prompting the inference that whole vessels were ceremonially smashed and then scattered.
It is about smashing the power of guilt feelings by profession and, therefore, confession of wayward passions.
For the first time in human history, the connection between political power and urban construction would be smashed.
It is easier to smash the old stories than to tell new, better ones.