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1 smash
[smæʃ] 1. verb1) ((sometimes with up) to (cause to) break in pieces or be ruined: The plate dropped on the floor and smashed into little pieces; This unexpected news had smashed all his hopes; He had an accident and smashed up his car.) sudužti, sudaužyti2) (to strike with great force; to crash: The car smashed into a lamp-post.) trenktis2. noun1) ((the sound of) a breakage; a crash: A plate fell to the ground with a smash; There has been a bad car smash.) sudužimas, trenksmas2) (a strong blow: He gave his opponent a smash on the jaw.) smūgis3) (in tennis etc, a hard downward shot.) smūgis iš viršaus•- smashing- smash hit -
2 bash
[bæʃ] 1. verb((sometimes with in) to beat or smash (in): The soldiers bashed in the door.) sumušti, sugurinti, išlaužti2. noun1) (a heavy blow: a bash with his foot.) smūgis2) (a dent: a bash on the car's nearside door.) įlenkimas•- bash on/ahead with- bash on/ahead
- have a bash at
См. также в других словарях:
smash — ► VERB 1) break violently into pieces. 2) hit or collide with forcefully. 3) crash and severely damage (a vehicle). 4) (in sport) strike (the ball) with great force. 5) completely defeat, destroy, or foil. ► NOUN 1) an act, insta … English terms dictionary
smash — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 breaking noisily into pieces ADJECTIVE ▪ loud VERB + SMASH ▪ hear PREPOSITION ▪ with a smash … Collocations dictionary
smash — /smæʃ / (say smash) verb (t) 1. to break to pieces with violence and often with a crashing sound, as by striking, letting fall, or dashing against something; shatter; crush. 2. to defeat utterly, as a person; overthrow or destroy, as a thing. 3.… …
smash up — verb damage or destroy as if by violence The teenager banged up the car of his mother • Syn: ↑bang up, ↑smash • Derivationally related forms: ↑smash (for: ↑smash), ↑smasher … Useful english dictionary
smash down — ˌsmash ˈdown [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they smash down he/she/it smashes down present participle smashing down past tense … Useful english dictionary
smash — verb 1》 break or cause to break violently into pieces. ↘(smash down) violently knock down. 2》 crash and severely damage (a vehicle). ↘(smash into) hit or collide with forcefully. 3》 (in sport) strike (the ball) or score (a goal, run,… … English new terms dictionary
smash up — verb a) to destroy, or be destroyed by smashing. b) to injure or maim … Wiktionary
smash down — verb a) To cause to fall down and break by hitting it hard. b) To fall heavily … Wiktionary
smash the stack — verb To corrupt the call stack, causing execution to jump to a random address, sometimes used as a malicious attack on a system. Theres something interesting about this approach mdash; we havent smashed the stack, so some mechanisms that might… … Wiktionary
smash — smash1 [ smæʃ ] verb ** 1. ) transitive to break something noisily into many pieces by dropping or hitting it with a lot of force: Someone had smashed a window. a ) intransitive to break noisily into many pieces: The bottle slipped and smashed to … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
smash — 1 verb 1 (I, T) to break into many small pieces violently or noisily, or to make something do this by dropping, throwing, or hitting it: I dropped the plate and it smashed. | He used a chair to smash the window. 2 (intransitive always + adv/prep … Longman dictionary of contemporary English