crack
Senso (Inglese)
-
- To form cracks.
- To break apart under force, stress, or pressure.
- To become debilitated by psychological pressure.
- To break down or yield, especially under interrogation or torture.
- To make a cracking sound.
- To change rapidly in register.
- To alternate between high and low register in the process of eventually lowering.
- To make a sharply humorous comment.
- (slang) To realize that one is transgender.
- To make a crack or cracks in.
- To break open or crush to small pieces by impact or stress.
- To strike forcefully.
- To open slightly.
- To cause to yield under interrogation or other pressure.
- To solve a difficult problem.
- To overcome a security system or component.
- To cause to make a sharp sound.
- To tell (a joke).
- (chemistry) To break down (a complex molecule), especially with the application of heat: to pyrolyse.
- To circumvent software restrictions such as regional coding or time limits.
- (informal) To open a canned beverage, or any packaged drink or food.
- (obsolete) To brag; to boast.
- (colloquial) To be ruined or impaired; to fail.
- (colloquial) To barely reach or attain (a measurement or extent).
Sinonimi
become cracked
split open
burst open
cut open
be cracked
smash into pieces
become fissured
A-one
crock up
yield
be ajar
be hot
bull through
chop wood
cut firewood
go bust
have fever
little hole
loud noise
narrow opening
obtrude upon
open slightly
renegue on
small hole
small opening
skin fissure
break into fragments
be discharged
ecphlysis
break of
first- class
clacking sound
make a cracking noise
shoulder in
shrink hole
fissura
be cleft
be fractured
begin to split
become split
become smashed
narrow gap
make fire
fish mouthing
especially in foot
dasmage
crach
scracth
be smashed
be torn
break a record
break in two
chip off
cold joint
edge in
first-class
renege on
Frequenza
Pronunciato come (IPA)
/kɹæk/
Etimologia (Inglese)
From Middle English crakken, craken, from Old English cracian (“to resound, crack”), from Proto-West Germanic *krakōn, from Proto-Germanic *krakōną (“to crack, crackle, shriek”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *gerh₂- (“to resound, cry hoarsely”). Cognate with Scots crak (“to crack”), West Frisian kreakje (“to crack”), Dutch kraken (“to crunch, creak, squeak”), Low German kraken (“to crack”), German krachen (“to crash, crack, creak”), Lithuanian gìrgžděti (“to creak, squeak”), Old Armenian կարկաչ (karkačʻ), Sanskrit गर्जति (gárjati, “to roar, hum”).
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