See Also: crash(2)(dictionary)
crash(1)(dictionary)
Crash(finance)
Crash(money)
crash(dictionary)
crash course(dictionary)
crash barrier(dictionary)
crash diet(dictionary)
crash helmet(dictionary)
crash 1, verb(dictionary)

crash (iou)



crash verb & adverb. LME.
[Imit., perh. partly suggested by craze and dash.]
A. verb.
I. verb intrans.
Break into pieces with a crash, shatter noisily; make a crash; move or go with a crash (usu. with adverb or adverbial phr.). LME.
W. Owen Your guns may crash around me. I'll not hear. I. Murdoch The glass crashed into pieces on the floor. D. M. Thomas She heard them crashing through the undergrowth, close behind her.
Make a grating or gnashing noise; gnash. LME-L16.
Collide violently with an obstacle etc.; run violently into; (of an aircraft or member of an aircrew) fall violently on to land or sea. E20.
N. Mailer A Jap plane had crashed in the swamp. Daily Telegraph A car crashed into a bus stop queue.
fig. Be ruined, esp. financially; fail, come to grief; (of a computer system etc.) fail or stop working, with loss of data; colloq. be heavily defeated. E20.
crash and burn N. Amer. colloq. come to grief or fail spectacularly.
T. S. Eliot I must give up the Criterion before my health crashes. J. Buchan A highbrow financier who..had just crashed.
Go in, into without authorization, invitation, etc. colloq. E20.
D. Runyon He hears rumours of the party, and just crashes in.
Go to bed, go to sleep. Also foll. by out. slang. M20.
It You can only crash here one night.
II. verb trans.
Break into pieces with a crash; shatter, smash. Now rare. LME.
Pope Full on his Ankle dropt the pond'rous Stone, Burst the strong Nerves, and crash'd the solid Bone.
Gnash (the teeth); crush with the teeth. M16-M18.
Throw or drive with a crash; cause (a vehicle etc.) to crash. M19.
S. O'Faolain He could..see the bigger of the two crash his fist into the face of the other. V. Scannell The one Who..crashed his bike Doing a ton.
Enter or pass without authorization; intrude at (a party etc.) without an invitation. E20.
crash the gate gatecrash. gatecrash: see GATE noun1.
R. Fuller I hope you'll forgive me crashing your excellent party.
b. adverb. With a crash. M18.
Thomas Hughes Crash went the slight deal boards.
crasher noun (a) a thing which crashes or makes a crash; a loud, percussive blow; (b) a person who intrudes uninvited at a party etc., = gatecrasher s.v. GATE noun1: M19.
crashing ppl adjective (a) that crashes; (b) colloq. overwhelming (esp. in
crashing bore): L16.
crashingly adverb (colloq.) overwhelmingly (esp. boring) L20.