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单词 wreck
释义

wreck

noun
/rek/
/rek/
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  1. a ship that has sunk or that has been very badly damaged
    • They're going to try and raise the wreck from the seabed.
    see also shipwreck
    Extra Examples
    • Heavy seas prevented salvage teams from landing on the wreck.
    • They are worried about the oil still in the wreck.
    • the wreck of the Titanic
    Topics Transport by waterc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverb + wreck
    • discover
    • find
    • locate
    preposition
    • in a/​the wreck
    • on a/​the wreck
    • wreck of
    See full entry
  2. a car, plane, etc. that has been very badly damaged in an accident
    • Two passengers are still trapped in the wreck.
    • She was pulled from the burning wreck by firefighters.
    Synonyms crashcrash
    • slam
    • collide
    • smash
    • wreck
    These are all words that can be used when something, especially a vehicle, hits something else very hard and is damaged or destroyed.
    • crash to hit an object or another vehicle, causing damage; to make a vehicle do this:
      • I was terrified that the plane would crash.
    • slam (something) into/​against somebody/​something to crash into something with a lot of force; to make something do this:
      • The car skidded and slammed into a tree.
    • collide (rather formal) (of two vehicles or people) to crash into each other; (of a vehicle or person) to crash into somebody/​something else:
      • The car and the van collided head-on in thick fog.
    • smash (rather informal) to crash into something with a lot of force; to make something do this; to crash a car:
      • Ram-raiders smashed a stolen car through the shop window.
    crash, slam or smash?Crash is used especially to talk about vehicles and can be used without a preposition: We’re going to crash, aren’t we? In this meaning slam and smash always take a preposition: We’re going to slam/​smash, aren’t we? They are used for a much wider range of things than just vehicles. Crash can also be used for other things, if used with a preposition: He crashed down the phone.
    • wreck to crash a vehicle and damage it so badly that it is not worth repairing
    Patterns
    • two vehicles crash/​collide
    • two vehicles crash/​slam/​smash into each other
    • to crash/​smash/​wreck a car
    Extra Examples
    • (figurative) The campaign is a train wreck waiting to happen.
    • The wreck occurred at milepost 534, just west of Greenup, Kentucky.
    • His attempts at damage control are like watching a car wreck.
    • Explosions ripped through the blazing wreck.
    Topics Transport by car or lorryc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • car
    • train
    verb + wreck
    • cause
    • survive
    phrases
    • like watching a car wreck
    • like watching a train wreck
    • a train wreck waiting to happen
    See full entry
  3. [usually singular] (informal) a person who is in a bad physical or mental condition
    • Physically, I was a total wreck.
    • The experience left her an emotional wreck.
    • The interview reduced him to a nervous wreck.
    Extra Examples
    • I hadn't slept for two days, and I felt a complete physical wreck.
    • I always turn into a gibbering wreck at interviews.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • absolute
    • complete
    • total
    verb + wreck
    • feel
    • look
    • reduce somebody to
    See full entry
  4. (informal) a vehicle, building, etc. that is in very bad condition
    • The house was a wreck when we bought it.
    • (figurative) They still hoped to salvage something from the wreck of their marriage.
    Topics Buildingsc2
  5. (North American English)
    (also crash British and North American English)
    an accident in which a vehicle hits something, for example another vehicle, usually causing damage and often injuring or killing the passengers
    • a car/train wreck
    More Like This Silent lettersSilent letters
    • gnarled
    • gnash
    • gnat
    • gnaw
    • gnome
    • haute cuisine
    • heir
    • herb
    • honour
    • hors d’oeuvre
    • hour
    • knack
    • knee
    • kneel
    • knife
    • knight
    • knit
    • knob
    • knock
    • knot
    • know
    • knuckle
    • psalm
    • psephology
    • psychic
    • ptarmigan
    • pterodactyl
    • psychology
    • wrangle
    • wrap
    • wreath
    • wreck
    • wrench
    • wrestle
    • wriggle
    • wring
    • write
    • wrong
    • bomb
    • climb
    • crumb
    • doubt
    • lamb
    • limb
    • ascent
    • fascinate
    • muscle
    • scene
    • scissors
    • height
    • right
    • sleigh
    • weight
    • align
    • campaign
    • design
    • foreign
    • malign
    • reign
    • unfeigned
    • balmy
    • calm
    • calf
    • half
    • yolk
    • autumn
    • column
    • condemn
    • damn
    • hymn
    • solemn
    • bristle
    • fasten
    • listen
    • mortgage
    • soften
    • thistle
    • wrestle
    • biscuit
    • build
    • circuit
    • disguise
    • guilty
    • league
    • rogue
    • vague
    • yacht
    • answer
    • sword
    • two
  6. Word OriginMiddle English (as a legal term denoting wreckage washed ashore): from Anglo-Norman French wrec, from the base of Old Norse reka ‘to drive’; related to wreak.

wreck

verb
/rek/
/rek/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they wreck
/rek/
/rek/
he / she / it wrecks
/reks/
/reks/
past simple wrecked
/rekt/
/rekt/
past participle wrecked
/rekt/
/rekt/
-ing form wrecking
/ˈrekɪŋ/
/ˈrekɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. wreck something to damage or destroy something
    • A bomb completely wrecked the building.
    • The building had been wrecked by the explosion.
    • The road was littered with wrecked cars.
    • youths who steal and wreck fast cars
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • completely
    • totally
    • almost
    verb + wreck
    • try to
    • want to
    • threaten to
    See full entry
  2. wreck something to cause something to fail completely
    • The weather wrecked all our plans.
    • A serious injury nearly wrecked his career.
    Extra Examples
    • Their lives had been wrecked by neglect and abuse.
    • His affair wrecked our marriage.
    • A serious injury in 2006 threatened to wreck his career.
    • a crisis that threatens to wreck the peace talks
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • completely
    • totally
    • almost
    verb + wreck
    • try to
    • want to
    • threaten to
    See full entry
  3. [usually passive] to damage a ship so much that it sinks or can no longer sail
    • be wrecked The ship was wrecked off the coast of France.
    see also shipwreck
  4. Word OriginMiddle English (as a legal term denoting wreckage washed ashore): from Anglo-Norman French wrec, from the base of Old Norse reka ‘to drive’; related to wreak.
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更新时间:2024/11/15 1:14:11