|
Adjective: broke browk Usage: informal
- Without or very short of money
"not so long ago that he was so broke his debit card was declined"; - bust [informal], skint [Brit, informal], stone-broke [N. Amer, informal], stony-broke [Brit, informal], strapped [informal], cash-strapped [informal], strapped for cash [informal] Verb: break (broke,broken) breyk- Destroy the integrity of; usually by force; cause to separate into pieces or fragments
"He broke the glass plate"; "She broke the match" - Become separated into pieces or fragments
"The figurine broke"; - separate, split up, fall apart, come apart - Render inoperable or ineffective
"You broke the alarm clock when you took it apart!"; - hose [N. Amer, informal] - Ruin completely
- bust [informal] - Terminate or end
"break a lucky streak"; "break the cycle of poverty"; - interrupt - Act in disregard of laws, rules, contracts, or promises
"break a law"; - transgress, offend, infract, violate, go against, breach - Move away or escape suddenly
"The horses broke from the stable"; "Three inmates broke jail"; "Nobody can break out--this prison is high security"; "The horses broke away from the stable"; - break out, break away - Scatter or part
"The clouds broke after the heavy downpour" - Force out or release suddenly and often violently something pent up
"break into tears"; - burst, erupt - Prevent completion
"break off the negotiations"; - break off, discontinue, stop - Enter someone's (virtual or real) property in an unauthorized manner, usually with the intent to steal or commit a violent act
"Someone broke in while I was on vacation"; "They broke into my car and stole my radio!"; "who broke into my account last night?"; - break in - Make submissive, obedient, or useful
"The horse was tough to break"; "I broke in the new intern"; - break in - Fail to agree with; be in violation of; as of rules or patterns
"This sentence breaks the rules of syntax"; - violate, go against - Surpass in excellence
"break a record"; - better - Make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret
"he broke the news to her"; - unwrap, disclose, let on, bring out, reveal, discover, expose, divulge, give away, let out, uncover, lay bare - Come into being
"light broke over the horizon"; "Voices broke in the air" - Stop operating or functioning
"The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town"; "The coffee maker broke"; - fail, go bad, give way, die, give out, conk out [informal], go, break down, pack up [Brit, informal] - Interrupt a continued activity
- break away - (military) make a rupture in the ranks of the enemy or one's own by quitting or fleeing
"The ranks broke" - Curl over and fall apart in surf or foam, of waves
"The surf broke" - Lessen in force or effect
"break a fall"; - dampen, damp, soften, weaken - Be broken in
"If the new teacher won't break, we'll add some stress" - Come to an end
"The heat wave finally broke yesterday" - Vary or interrupt a uniformity or continuity
- Cause to give up a habit
"She finally broke herself of smoking cigarettes" - Give up
"break cigarette smoking" - Come forth or begin from a state of latency
"The first winter storm broke over New York" - Happen or take place
"Things have been breaking pretty well for us in the past few months" - Cause the failure or ruin of
"His peccadilloes finally broke his marriage"; "This play will either make or break the playwright" - Invalidate by judicial action
- Discontinue an association or relation; go different ways
"The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple broke up after 25 years of marriage"; - separate, part, split up, split, break up - Assign to a lower position; reduce in rank
- demote, bump, relegate, kick downstairs - Reduce to bankruptcy
"My daughter's fancy wedding is going to break me!"; - bankrupt, ruin, smash - Change directions suddenly
- Emerge from the surface of a body of water
"The whales broke" - Break down, literally or metaphorically
"The dam broke"; - collapse, fall in, cave in, give, give way, founder - Do a break dance
"Kids were break-dancing at the street corner"; - break dance, break-dance - Exchange for smaller units of money
"I had to break a $100 bill just to buy the candy" - Destroy the completeness of a set of related items
"The book dealer would not break the set"; - break up - (billiards) make the opening shot that scatters the balls
- Separate from a clinch, in boxing
"The referee broke the boxers" - Go to pieces
"The lawn mower finally broke"; - wear, wear out, bust [informal], fall apart - Break a piece from a whole
"break a branch from a tree"; - break off, snap off - Become punctured or penetrated
"The skin broke" - Pierce or penetrate
"The blade broke her skin" - Be released or become known; of news
"News of her death broke in the morning"; - get out, get around - Cease an action temporarily
"let's break for lunch"; - pause, intermit - Interrupt the flow of current in
"break a circuit" - Undergo breaking
"The simple vowels broke in many Germanic languages" - Find a flaw in
"break an alibi"; "break down a proof" - Find the solution or key to
"break the code" - Change suddenly from one tone quality or register to another
"Her voice broke to a whisper when she started to talk about her children" - Happen
"These political movements break from time to time"; - recrudesce, develop - Become fractured; break or crack on the surface only
"The glass broke when it was heated"; - crack, check - Crack; of the male voice in puberty
"his voice is breaking--he should no longer sing in the choir" - Fall sharply
"stock prices broke" - Fracture a bone of
"I broke my foot while playing hockey"; - fracture - Diminish or discontinue abruptly
"The patient's fever broke last night" - Weaken or destroy in spirit or body
- Yield information under interrogation or torture
"They managed to break him on the third day"; - crack - Successfully decipher a code
- crack
See also: analyse [Brit, Cdn], break up, cut off, descend, fall, poor, take apart Type of: alter, annul, appear, assign, avoid, become, blunt, break loose, break up, cease, change, change integrity, change state, come about, come forth, commute, convert, crumble, cut and run [informal], cut off, damage, dance, deaden, decay, decrease, delegate, depute, designate, destroy, detach, dilapidate, diminish, diphthongise [Brit], diphthongize, discontinue, disperse, disrespect, disrupt, dissipate, disunite, divide, domesticate, domesticise [Brit], domesticize, emerge, end, escape, exceed, exchange, express emotion, express feelings, fall, fall out, figure out, finish, flee, fly, get, get away, give up, go, go on, hap [archaic], happen, impoverish, injure, interrupt, intrude, invalidate, lay off, lessen, lick [N. Amer, informal], modify, nullify, occur, outdo, outgo [archaic], outmatch, outperform, outstrip, part, pass, pass off, penetrate, perforate, puzzle out, quash, quit, reclaim, ruin, scatter, separate, shift, shoot, solve, spread out, stop, surcease [archaic], surmount, surpass, suss [Brit, informal], suss out [Brit, informal], switch, take flight, take place, tame, tell, terminate, trespass, trip the light fantastic, trip the light fantastic toe, turn, unriddle, vary, void, weaken, work, work out, wound Antonym: fix, make, raise Encyclopedia: Broke, Richard Break, Break, Break |