| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal. |
break (breɪk) ![]() | |
| —vb (when intr | |
| 1. | to separate or become separated into two or more pieces: this cup is broken |
| 2. | to damage or become damaged so as to be inoperative: my radio is broken |
| 3. | to crack or become cracked without separating |
| 4. | to burst or cut the surface of (skin, etc) |
| 5. | to discontinue or become discontinued: they broke for lunch; to break a journey |
| 6. | to disperse or become dispersed: the clouds broke |
| 7. | (tr) to fail to observe (an agreement, promise, law, etc): to break one's word |
| 8. | ( |
| 9. | to disclose or be disclosed: he broke the news gently |
| 10. | (tr) to fracture (a bone) in (a limb, etc) |
| 11. | (tr) to divide (something complete or perfect): to break a set of books |
| 12. | to bring or come to an end: the summer weather broke at last |
| 13. | (tr) to bring to an end by or as if by force: to break a strike |
| 14. | to escape (from): he broke jail; he broke out of jail |
| 15. | to weaken or overwhelm or be weakened or overwhelmed, as in spirit |
| 16. | (tr) to cut through or penetrate: a cry broke the silence |
| 17. | (tr) to improve on or surpass: to break a record |
| 18. | to accustom (a horse) to the bridle and saddle, to being ridden, etc |
| 19. | to cause (a person) to give up (a habit): this cure will break you of smoking |
| 20. | (tr) to weaken the impact or force of: this net will break his fall |
| 21. | (tr) to decipher: to break a code |
| 22. | (tr) to lose the order of: to break ranks |
| 23. | (tr) to reduce to poverty or the state of bankruptcy |
| 24. | to obtain, give, or receive smaller units in exchange for; change: to break a pound note |
| 25. | chiefly (tr) military to demote to a lower rank |
| 26. | (intr |
| 27. | (intr) to come into being: light broke over the mountains |
| 28. | (intr |
| a. to burst into song, laughter, etc | |
| b. to change to a faster pace | |
| 29. | (tr) to open with explosives: to break a safe |
| 30. | (intr) of waves |
| a. ( | |
| b. to collapse into foam or surf | |
| 31. | (intr) (esp of fish) to appear above the surface of the water |
| 32. | (intr) (of the amniotic fluid surrounding an unborn baby) to be released when the amniotic sac ruptures in the first stage of labour: her waters have broken |
| 33. | informal chiefly (US) (intr) to turn out in a specified manner: things are breaking well |
| 34. | (intr) (of prices, esp stock exchange quotations) to fall sharply |
| 35. | (intr) to make a sudden effort, as in running, horse racing, etc |
| 36. | (intr) cricket (of a ball) to change direction on bouncing |
| 37. | (tr) cricket (of a player) to knock down at least one bail from (a wicket) |
| 38. | (intr) billiards, snooker to scatter the balls at the start of a game |
| 39. | (intr) horse racing to commence running in a race: they broke even |
| 40. | (intr) boxing, wrestling (of two fighters) to separate from a clinch |
| 41. | (intr) music |
| a. (of the male voice) to undergo a change in register, quality, and range at puberty | |
| b. (of the voice or some instruments) to undergo a change in tone, quality, etc, when changing registers | |
| 42. | (intr) phonetics (of a vowel) to turn into a diphthong, esp as a development in the language |
| 43. | (tr) to open the breech of (certain firearms) by snapping the barrel away from the butt on its hinge |
| 44. | (tr) Compare make to interrupt the flow of current in (an electrical circuit) |
| 45. | informal chiefly (US) (intr) to become successful; make a breakthrough |
| 46. | break bread |
| a. to eat a meal, esp with others | |
| b. Christianity to administer or participate in Holy Communion | |
| 47. | break camp to pack up equipment and leave a camp |
| 48. | break ground, break new ground to do something that has not been done before |
| 49. | to overwork or work very hard |
| 50. | break the back of to complete the greatest or hardest part of (a task) |
| 51. | break the bank to ruin financially or deplete the resources of a bank (as in gambling) |
| 52. | break the ice |
| a. to relieve shyness or reserve, esp between strangers | |
| b. to be the first of a group to do something | |
| 53. | break the mould to make a change that breaks an established habit, pattern, etc |
| 54. | tennis break service to win a game in which an opponent is serving |
| 55. | break wind to emit wind from the anus |
| —n | |
| 56. | the act or result of breaking; fracture |
| 57. | a crack formed as the result of breaking |
| 58. | a brief respite or interval between two actions: a break from one's toil |
| 59. | a sudden rush, esp to escape: to make a break for freedom |
| 60. | a breach in a relationship: she has made a break from her family |
| 61. | any sudden interruption in a continuous action |
| 62. | (Brit) US and Canadian equivalent: recess a short period between classes at school |
| 63. | informal a fortunate opportunity, esp to prove oneself |
| 64. | informal a piece of (good or bad) luck |
| 65. | (esp in a stock exchange) a sudden and substantial decline in prices |
| 66. | prosody a pause in a line of verse; caesura |
| 67. | billiards, snooker |
| a. a series of successful shots during one turn | |
| b. the points scored in such a series | |
| 68. | billiards, snooker |
| a. the opening shot with the cue ball that scatters the placed balls | |
| b. the right to take this first shot | |
| 69. | tennis service break, Also called: break of serve the act or instance of breaking an opponent's service |
| 70. | one of the intervals in a sporting contest |
| 71. | horse racing the start of a race: an even break |
| 72. | (in tenpin bowling) failure to knock down all the pins after the second attempt |
| 73. | a. jazz a short usually improvised solo passage |
| b. an instrumental passage in a pop song | |
| 74. | a discontinuity in an electrical circuit |
| 75. | access to a radio channel by a citizens' band operator |
| 76. | a variant spelling of brake |
| —interj | |
| 77. | boxing, wrestling a command by a referee for two opponents to separate |
| [Old English brecan; related to Old Frisian breka, Gothic brikan, Old High German brehhan, Latin frangere Sanskrit bhráj bursting forth] | |
| break down | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | (intr) to cease to function; become ineffective: communications had broken down |
| 2. | to yield or cause to yield, esp to strong emotion or tears: she broke down in anguish |
| 3. | (tr) to crush or destroy |
| 4. | (intr) to have a nervous breakdown |
| 5. | to analyse or be subjected to analysis |
| 6. | to separate or cause to separate into simpler chemical elements; decompose |
| 7. | (NZ) (tr) to saw (a large log) into planks |
| 8. | informal (Austral), (NZ) break it down |
| a. stop it | |
| b. don't expect me to believe that; come off it | |
| —n | |
| 9. | an act or instance of breaking down; collapse |
| 10. | short for nervous breakdown |
| 11. | an analysis or classification of something into its component parts: he prepared a breakdown of the report |
| 12. | the sudden electrical discharge through an insulator or between two electrodes in a vacuum or gas discharge tube |
| 13. | electrical engineering the sudden transition, dependent on the bias magnitude, from a high to a low dynamic resistance in a semiconductor device |
| 14. | a lively American country dance |
break definition
|
break down
Demolish, destroy, either physically or figuratively, as in The carpenters broke down the partition between the bedrooms, or The governor's speeches broke down the teachers' opposition to school reform. [Late 1300s]
Separate into constituent parts, analyze. For example, I insisted that they break down the bill into the separate charges for parts and labor, or The chemist was trying to break down the compound's molecules. [Mid-1800s]
Stop functioning, cease to be effective or operable, as in The old dishwasher finally broke down. [Mid-1800s]
Become distressed or upset; also, have a physical or mental collapse, as in The funeral was too much for her and she broke down in tears, or After seeing all his work come to nothing, he broke down and had to be treated by a psychiatrist. [Late 1800s]