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单词 wreck
释义 wreck
I. \ˈrek\ noun
(-s)
Etymology: Middle English wrek, from Anglo-French wrek, wrec, warec, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse rek wreck, reka to drive, push — more at wreak
1. : something that is cast up on the land by the sea; specifically : goods and other material cast upon the land by the sea after a shipwreck
 < when flotsam, jetsam and lagan are thrown by the waves on land, they become wreck — F.D.Smith & Barbara Wilcox >
2. dialect Britain : wrack 2
3.
 a. : the destruction or injury of a vessel by being cast on shore or on rocks or by being disabled or sunk by the force of winds or waves or by other accident : shipwreck; also : an instance of such destruction or foundering
 b. : the action of wrecking or the fact or state of being wrecked : destruction, disorganization, or serious injury of something especially by violence : the process of bringing or being brought to disaster
  < tempted motorists to such high speeds that wrecks were frequent — American Guide Series: Arkansas >
  < two points of view are left, after the wreck of the naïve progress-myth — Herbert Agar >
4.
 a. : a hulk or the ruins of a wrecked or stranded ship : a ship dashed against rocks or land and broken or otherwise made useless; also : a dilapidated old ship beyond or near the end of service
 b. : the disordered or broken remains of something that has been wrecked, demolished, or otherwise ruined
  < saw the wreck of a great civilization … and nothing left except some ruins and rocks — F.D.Roosevelt >
  < are these rings, perhaps, the wrecks of ancient novae — Waldemar Kaempffert >
  < in the wreck of the ancient literature it is not easy to illustrate as abundantly — Benjamin Farrington >
 also : the physically or spiritually broken or decayed remains of a person
  < seeing the wreck of the flamboyant figure, to offer him food and drink — E.V.Lucas >
  < a wreck of former talent — H.J.Laski >
 c. : something that has been wrecked or disabled : something shattered or in a state of ruin or dilapidation
  < an equally prominent location to deposit the wreck of a car — G.R.Stewart >
 also : a person or animal of broken constitution, health, or spirits
  < such work killed many of them, or deformed them, or left them tubercular wrecks — Stringfellow Barr >
  < this poor wreck of a gutless coward — Barnaby Conrad >
II. verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: Middle English wrekken, from wrek wreck
transitive verb
1. : to cast ashore
2.
 a. : to reduce to a ruinous state by violence : overthrow, shatter, or destroy by force : cause to crash or suffer ruin
  < wreck a train >
  < the cashier's errors wrecked the bank >
  : break up completely : frustrate
  < wreck a political program >
  < ambition wrecked his marriage >
 b. : to destroy, disable, or seriously damage (as a ship) by driving against the shore or on rocks or by causing to become unseaworthy or to founder : shipwreck
 c. : to involve in a wreck : cause to suffer or to be lost by shipwreck : ruin, damage, or imperil by wreck
  < wrecked freight >
  < passengers wrecked on the coast >
 d. : to involve in irreparable disaster or ruin
  < wreck himself with dissipation >
  < wreck their future happiness >
 e. : to bring to a condition of complete physical impairment or to an unsound condition
  < wreck his constitution >
3.
 a. obsolete : wreak 1b
 b. : wreak 3
  < they wreck havoc with hives, smashing commercial hives into splinters — Wildlife in North Carolina >
4. : to free (tar) of liquid accumulated on the surface
intransitive verb
1. : to suffer wreck : become wrecked
 < when the car wrecked at 3:30 a.m. — Springfield (Massachusetts) Daily News >
2. : to search out, remove, rob, salvage, or repair wreckage or a wreck
Synonyms: see destroy
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更新时间:2025/1/11 15:55:26