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wrecked (verb)

См. также в других словарях:

  • wrecked — /rɛkt/ (say rekt) verb 1. past tense and past participle of wreck. –adjective 2. Colloquial exhausted; ill or weak because of fatigue or overindulgence in food, drink, etc …  

  • go on the rampage — verb To behave violently or to riot The rioters went on the rampage and wrecked the townhall …   Wiktionary

  • hit the roof — verb to be explosively angry When I found out he wrecked my brand new car, I hit the roof. Syn: blow ones top, go ape, go apeshit, hit the ceiling, lose it, lose ones rag …   Wiktionary

  • wreck shop — verb a) To go to town , to do something with vigor, very enthusiastically. Steve was just wrecking shop on the track, no one could touch him. b) To make a mess. Dave got wasted drunk and wrecked shop, which is why hes not invited tonight …   Wiktionary

  • salvage — verb 1》 rescue (a ship or its cargo) from loss at sea. 2》 retrieve or preserve from loss or destruction. noun 1》 the process of salvaging. 2》 the cargo saved from a wrecked or sunken ship.     ↘Law payment made or due to a person who has saved a… …   English new terms dictionary

  • ransack — verb (T) 1 to search a place very thoroughly: She s ransacking the desk drawers for old family photos. 2 to go through a place stealing things and causing damage: Houses were wrecked and ransacked by wandering gangs of soldiers …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • wreck — Verb: To tear down. To drive a vehicle or handle an object in such manner as to destroy or damage it greatly. To disorganize or cause serious injury to anything. Mochel v Iowa State Traveling Men s Asso. 203 Iowa 623, 213 NW 259, 51 ALR 1327.… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • wreck — I. noun Etymology: Middle English wrek, from Anglo French, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse rek wreck; akin to Old English wrecan to drive Date: 12th century 1. something cast up on the land by the sea especially after a shipwreck 2. a.… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Ockham’s world and future — Arthur Gibson PHILOSOPHICAL BIOGRAPHY Ockham was born in about 1285, certainly before 1290, probably in the village of Ockham, Surrey, near London. If his epitaph is accurate, he died on 10 April 1347. Yet Conrad of Megenberg, when writing to… …   History of philosophy

  • wreck — [[t]re̱k[/t]] wrecks, wrecking, wrecked 1) VERB To wreck something means to completely destroy or ruin it. [V n] He wrecked the garden... [V n] A coalition could have defeated the government and wrecked the treaty... [V n] His life has been… …   English dictionary

  • wreck */ — I UK [rek] / US verb [transitive] Word forms wreck : present tense I/you/we/they wreck he/she/it wrecks present participle wrecking past tense wrecked past participle wrecked 1) a) to severely damage or destroy a vehicle or building The town has… …   English dictionary

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