单词 | break up |
释义 | break up 1. phrasal verb B1 When something breaks up or when you break it up, it separates or is divided into several smaller parts. Civil war could come if the country breaks up. [VERB PARTICLE] There was a danger of the ship breaking up completely. [VERB PARTICLE] Break up the chocolate and melt it. [VERB PARTICLE noun] He broke the bread up into chunks and gave Meer a big one. [V n P + into] Tanks are strongly built. It is a complicated and difficult process to break them up. [VERB noun PARTICLE] 2. phrasal verb B1+ If you break up with your boyfriend, girlfriend, husband, or wife, your relationship with that person ends. My girlfriend had broken up with me. [VERB PARTICLE + with] He felt appalled by the whole idea of marriage so we broke up. [VERB PARTICLE] 3. phrasal verb B1+ If a marriage breaks up or if someone breaks it up, the marriage ends and the partners separate. MPs say they work too hard and that is why so many of their marriages break up. [VERB PARTICLE] Fred has given me no good reason for wanting to break up our marriage. [VERB PARTICLE noun] 4. phrasal verb When a meeting or gathering breaks up or when someone breaks it up, it is brought to an end and the people involved in it leave. A neighbour asked for the music to be turned down and the party broke up. [VERB PARTICLE] Police used tear gas to break up a demonstration. [VERB PARTICLE noun] He charged into the crowd. 'Break it up,' he shouted. [VERB noun PARTICLE] 5. phrasal verb B1 When a school or the pupils in it break up, the school term ends and the pupils start their holidays. [British] It's the last week before they break up, and they're doing all kinds of Christmas things. [VERB PARTICLE] 6. phrasal verb If you say that someone is breaking up when you are speaking to them on a mobile phone, you mean that you can only hear parts of what they are saying because the signal is interrupted. The line's gone; I think you're breaking up. [VERB PARTICLE] 7. phrasal verb If something breaks someone up, it causes them to lose control and begin to laugh or cry. Kindness breaks me up; it makes me cry. [VERB noun PARTICLE] 8. See also break-up See full dictionary entry for break break-up also breakup Word forms: break-ups 1. countable noun [noun NOUN] The break-up of a marriage, relationship, or association is the act of it finishing or coming to an end because the people involved decide that it is not working successfully. Since the break-up of his marriage he had not formed any new relationships. ...the acrimonious break-up of the meeting's first session. [+ of] ...a marital break-up. Synonyms: separation, split, divorce, breakdown 2. countable noun The break-up of an organization or a country is the act of it separating or dividing into several parts. The struggling music group is considering a break-up of its three divisions in an attempt to speed up recovery. [+ of] One in five people believes that a break-up would be favourable. Translations: Chinese: 打碎 Japanese: ばらばらにする |
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