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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
broke
I.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
broke into a gallop (=begin to go very fast)
▪ The horses broke into a gallop .
broke into a run
▪ He was still following me, and in a panic I broke into a run.
broke into a trot (=started running slowly)
▪ She broke into a trot and hurried on ahead of us.
dawn broke (=the first light of the day appeared)
▪ When dawn broke , we were still 50 miles from Calcutta.
Fighting broke out
Fighting broke out in the crowds.
pandemonium broke out
▪ When the verdict was read pandemonium broke out in the courtroom.
Scuffles broke out
Scuffles broke out between rival supporters during the match.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
all hell broke loose
▪ Debbie told him to shut up, he slapped her, and then all hell broke loose.
▪ When a fan jumped onto the stage, all hell broke loose.
▪ A sparrow hawk appeared - and all hell broke loose!
▪ And then, all hell broke loose.
▪ But then all hell broke loose, geologically speaking, as increasing numbers of sources for the rock were discovered.
▪ Journalists woke him up in his bed with the news and, as I suspected, all hell broke loose.
▪ Not at all bad considering that all hell broke loose in September and the City was rocked by events outside its control.
▪ She started to strip off, all hell broke loose and he bolted while plain-clothes officers moved in to stage a cover-up.
▪ What actually happened was that I was as drunk as anybody in the barracks the night all hell broke loose.
▪ When the story was leaked to the press, all hell broke loose.
the man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo
II.adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ "Can you lend me some money?" "Sorry, I'm broke."
▪ He turned up at my house yesterday, flat broke and hungry.
▪ I can't go - I'm broke.
▪ Lawrence was so broke he had to wear the same suit to work every day.
▪ She just come back off holiday and she's completely broke.
▪ We're always broke at the end of the month.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Bethlehem went broke a year later, but a reissue set appeared 20 years later.
▪ If you removed the future earnings, Baker told jurors, O. J. Simpson is flat broke.
▪ Naturally I am broke, or almost.
▪ Tilden died broke, and shunned by many because of his conviction for homosexuality with underage partners.
▪ Who spends his portion will be broke.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
broke

Break \Break\ (br[=a]k), v. t. [imp. broke (br[=o]k), (Obs. Brake); p. p. Broken (br[=o]"k'n), (Obs. Broke); p. pr. & vb. n. Breaking.] [OE. breken, AS. brecan; akin to OS. brekan, D. breken, OHG. brehhan, G. brechen, Icel. braka to creak, Sw. braka, br["a]kka to crack, Dan. br[ae]kke to break, Goth. brikan to break, L. frangere. Cf. Bray to pound, Breach, Fragile.]

  1. To strain apart; to sever by fracture; to divide with violence; as, to break a rope or chain; to break a seal; to break an axle; to break rocks or coal; to break a lock.
    --Shak.

  2. To lay open as by breaking; to divide; as, to break a package of goods.

  3. To lay open, as a purpose; to disclose, divulge, or communicate.

    Katharine, break thy mind to me.
    --Shak.

  4. To infringe or violate, as an obligation, law, or promise.

    Out, out, hyena! these are thy wonted arts . . . To break all faith, all vows, deceive, betray.
    --Milton

  5. To interrupt; to destroy the continuity of; to dissolve or terminate; as, to break silence; to break one's sleep; to break one's journey.

    Go, release them, Ariel; My charms I'll break, their senses I'll restore.
    --Shak.

  6. To destroy the completeness of; to remove a part from; as, to break a set.

  7. To destroy the arrangement of; to throw into disorder; to pierce; as, the cavalry were not able to break the British squares.

  8. To shatter to pieces; to reduce to fragments.

    The victim broke in pieces the musical instruments with which he had solaced the hours of captivity.
    --Prescott.

  9. To exchange for other money or currency of smaller denomination; as, to break a five dollar bill.

  10. To destroy the strength, firmness, or consistency of; as, to break flax.

  11. To weaken or impair, as health, spirit, or mind.

    An old man, broken with the storms of state.
    --Shak.

  12. To diminish the force of; to lessen the shock of, as a fall or blow.

    I'll rather leap down first, and break your fall.
    --Dryden.

  13. To impart, as news or information; to broach; -- with to, and often with a modified word implying some reserve; as, to break the news gently to the widow; to break a purpose cautiously to a friend.

  14. To tame; to reduce to subjection; to make tractable; to discipline; as, to break a horse to the harness or saddle. ``To break a colt.''
    --Spenser.

    Why, then thou canst not break her to the lute?
    --Shak.

  15. To destroy the financial credit of; to make bankrupt; to ruin.

    With arts like these rich Matho, when he speaks, Attracts all fees, and little lawyers breaks.
    --Dryden.

  16. To destroy the official character and standing of; to cashier; to dismiss. I see a great officer broken. --Swift. Note: With prepositions or adverbs: To break down.

    1. To crush; to overwhelm; as, to break down one's strength; to break down opposition.

    2. To remove, or open a way through, by breaking; as, to break down a door or wall. To break in.

      1. To force in; as, to break in a door.

      2. To train; to discipline; as, a horse well broken in. To break of, to rid of; to cause to abandon; as, to break one of a habit. To break off.

        1. To separate by breaking; as, to break off a twig.

        2. To stop suddenly; to abandon. ``Break off thy sins by righteousness.'' --Dan. iv. 27. To break open, to open by breaking. ``Open the door, or I will break it open.'' --Shak. To break out, to take or force out by breaking; as, to break out a pane of glass. To break out a cargo, to unstow a cargo, so as to unload it easily. To break through.

          1. To make an opening through, as, as by violence or the force of gravity; to pass violently through; as, to break through the enemy's lines; to break through the ice.

          2. To disregard; as, to break through the ceremony. To break up.

            1. To separate into parts; to plow (new or fallow ground). ``Break up this capon.''
              --Shak. ``Break up your fallow ground.''
              --Jer. iv. 3.

            2. To dissolve; to put an end to. ``Break up the court.'' --Shak. To break (one) all up, to unsettle or disconcert completely; to upset. [Colloq.] Note: With an immediate object: To break the back.

              1. To dislocate the backbone; hence, to disable totally.

              2. To get through the worst part of; as, to break the back of a difficult undertaking. To break bulk, to destroy the entirety of a load by removing a portion of it; to begin to unload; also, to transfer in detail, as from boats to cars. To break a code to discover a method to convert coded messages into the original understandable text. To break cover, to burst forth from a protecting concealment, as game when hunted. To break a deer or To break a stag, to cut it up and apportion the parts among those entitled to a share. To break fast, to partake of food after abstinence. See Breakfast. To break ground.

                1. To open the earth as for planting; to commence excavation, as for building, siege operations, and the like; as, to break ground for a foundation, a canal, or a railroad.

                2. Fig.: To begin to execute any plan.

    3. (Naut.) To release the anchor from the bottom.

      To break the heart, to crush or overwhelm (one) with grief.

      To break a house (Law), to remove or set aside with violence and a felonious intent any part of a house or of the fastenings provided to secure it.

      To break the ice, to get through first difficulties; to overcome obstacles and make a beginning; to introduce a subject.

      To break jail, to escape from confinement in jail, usually by forcible means.

      To break a jest, to utter a jest. ``Patroclus . . . the livelong day breaks scurril jests.''
      --Shak.

      To break joints, to lay or arrange bricks, shingles, etc., so that the joints in one course shall not coincide with those in the preceding course.

      To break a lance, to engage in a tilt or contest.

      To break the neck, to dislocate the joints of the neck.

      To break no squares, to create no trouble. [Obs.]

      To break a path, road, etc., to open a way through obstacles by force or labor.

      To break upon a wheel, to execute or torture, as a criminal by stretching him upon a wheel, and breaking his limbs with an iron bar; -- a mode of punishment formerly employed in some countries.

      To break wind, to give vent to wind from the anus.

      Syn: To dispart; rend; tear; shatter; batter; violate; infringe; demolish; destroy; burst; dislocate.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
broke

past tense and obsolete past participle of break (v.); extension to "insolvent" is first recorded 1716 (broken in this sense is attested from 1590s). Old English cognate broc meant, in addition to "that which breaks," "affliction, misery."

Wiktionary
broke

Etymology 1

  1. 1 (context informal English) lack money; bankrupt 2 (context informal English) broken. 3 (context nautical English) Demoted, deprived of a commission. v

  2. 1 (en-simple pastbreak) 2 (context archaic nonstandard or poetic English) (past participle of break English) Etymology 2

    n. (context papermaking English) Paper or board that is discarded and repulped during the manufacturing process. Etymology 3

    vb. 1 To broker; to transact business for another. 2 (context obsolete English) To act as procurer in love matters; to pimp.

WordNet
broke

adj. lacking funds; "`skint' is a British slang term" [syn: bust, skint, stone-broke, stony-broke]

break
  1. n. some abrupt occurrence that interrupts; "the telephone is an annoying interruption"; "there was a break in the action when a player was hurt" [syn: interruption]

  2. an unexpected piece of good luck; "he finally got his big break" [syn: good luck, happy chance]

  3. (geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other; "they built it right over a geological fault" [syn: fault, geological fault, shift, fracture]

  4. a personal or social separation (as between opposing factions); "they hoped to avoid a break in relations" [syn: rupture, breach, severance, rift, falling out]

  5. a pause from doing something (as work); "we took a 10-minute break"; "he took time out to recuperate" [syn: respite, recess, time out]

  6. the act of breaking something; "the breakage was unavoidable" [syn: breakage, breaking]

  7. a time interval during which there is a temporary cessation of something [syn: pause, intermission, interruption, suspension]

  8. breaking of hard tissue such as bone; "it was a nasty fracture"; "the break seems to have been caused by a fall" [syn: fracture]

  9. the occurrence of breaking; "the break in the dam threatened the valley"

  10. the opening shot that scatters the balls in billiards or pool

  11. (tennis) a score consisting of winning a game when your opponent was serving; "he was up two breaks in the second set" [syn: break of serve]

  12. an act of delaying or interrupting the continuity; "it was presented without commercial breaks" [syn: interruption, disruption, gap]

  13. a sudden dash; "he made a break for the open door"

  14. any frame in which a bowler fails to make a strike or spare; "the break in the eighth frame cost him the match" [syn: open frame]

  15. an escape from jail; "the breakout was carefully planned" [syn: breakout, jailbreak, gaolbreak, prisonbreak, prison-breaking]

  16. [also: broken, broke]

break
  1. v. terminate; "She interrupted her pregnancy"; "break a lucky streak"; "break the cycle of poverty" [syn: interrupt]

  2. become separated into pieces or fragments; "The figurine broke"; "The freshly baked loaf fell apart" [syn: separate, split up, fall apart, come apart]

  3. destroy the integrity of; usually by force; cause to separate into pieces or fragments; "He broke the glass plate"; "She broke the match"

  4. render inoperable or ineffective; "You broke the alarm clock when you took it apart!"

  5. ruin completely; "He busted my radio!" [syn: bust] [ant: repair]

  6. act in disregard of laws and rules; "offend all laws of humanity"; "violate the basic laws or human civilization"; "break a law" [syn: transgress, offend, infract, violate, go against, breach]

  7. move away or escape suddenly; "The horses broke from the stable"; "Three inmates broke jail"; "Nobody can break out--this prison is high security" [syn: break out, break away]

  8. scatter or part; "The clouds broke after the heavy downpour"

  9. force out or release suddenly and often violently something pent up; "break into tears"; "erupt in anger" [syn: burst, erupt]

  10. prevent completion; "stop the project"; "break off the negociations" [syn: break off, discontinue, stop]

  11. enter someone's 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!" [syn: break in]

  12. make submissive, obedient, or useful; "The horse was tough to break"; "I broke in the new intern" [syn: break in]

  13. fail to agree with; be in violation of; as of rules or patterns; "This sentence violates the rules of syntax" [syn: violate, go against] [ant: conform to]

  14. surpass in excellence; "She bettered her own record"; "break a record" [syn: better]

  15. make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to her" [syn: disclose, let on, bring out, reveal, discover, expose, divulge, impart, give away, let out]

  16. come into being; "light broke over the horizon"; "Voices broke in the air"

  17. stop operating or functioning; "The engine finally went"; "The car died on the road"; "The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town"; "The coffee maker broke"; "The engine failed on the way to town"; "her eyesight went after the accident" [syn: fail, go bad, give way, die, give out, conk out, go, break down]

  18. interrupt a continued activity; "She had broken with the traditional patterns" [syn: break away]

  19. make a rupture in the ranks of the enemy or one's own by quitting or fleeing; "The ranks broke"

  20. curl over and fall apart in surf or foam, of waves; "The surf broke"

  21. lessen in force or effect; "soften a shock"; "break a fall" [syn: dampen, damp, soften, weaken]

  22. be broken in; "If the new teacher won't break, we'll add some stress"

  23. come to an end; "The heat wave finally broke yesterday"

  24. vary or interrupt a uniformity or continuity; "The flat plain was broken by tall mesas"

  25. cause to give up a habit; "She finally broke herself of smoking cigarettes"

  26. give up; "break cigarette smoking"

  27. come forth or begin from a state of latency; "The first winter storm broke over New York"

  28. happen or take place; "Things have been breaking pretty well for us in the past few months"

  29. cause the failure or ruin of; "His peccadilloes finally broke his marriage"; "This play will either make or break the playwright" [ant: make]

  30. invalidate by judicial action; "The will was broken"

  31. discontinue an association or relation; go different ways; "The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple separated after 25 years of marriage"; "My friend and I split up" [syn: separate, part, split up, split, break up]

  32. assign to a lower position; reduce in rank; "She was demoted because she always speaks up"; "He was broken down to Sargeant" [syn: demote, bump, relegate, kick downstairs] [ant: promote]

  33. reduce to bankruptcy; "My daughter's fancy wedding is going to break me!"; "The slump in the financial markets smashed him" [syn: bankrupt, ruin, smash]

  34. change directions suddenly

  35. emerge from the surface of a body of water; "The whales broke"

  36. break down, literally or metaphorically; "The wall collapsed"; "The business collapsed"; "The dam broke"; "The roof collapsed"; "The wall gave in"; "The roof finally gave under the weight of the ice" [syn: collapse, fall in, cave in, give, give way, founder]

  37. do a break dance; "Kids were break-dancing at the street corner" [syn: break dance, break-dance]

  38. exchange for smaller units of money; "I had to break a $100 bill just to buy the candy"

  39. destroy the completeness of a set of related items; "The book dealer would not break the set" [syn: break up]

  40. make the opening shot that scatters the balls

  41. separate from a clinch, in boxing; "The referee broke the boxers"

  42. go to pieces; "The lawn mower finally broke"; "The gears wore out"; "The old chair finally fell apart completely" [syn: wear, wear out, bust, fall apart]

  43. break a piece from a whole; "break a branch from a tree" [syn: break off, snap off]

  44. become punctured or penetrated; "The skin broke"

  45. pierce or penetrate; "The blade broke her skin"

  46. be released or become known; of news; "News of her death broke in the morning" [syn: get out, get around]

  47. cease an action temporarily; "We pause for station identification"; "let's break for lunch" [syn: pause, intermit]

  48. interrupt the flow of current in; "break a circuit"

  49. undergo breaking; "The simple vowels broke in many Germanic languages"

  50. find a flaw in; "break an alibi"; "break down a proof"

  51. find the solution or key to; "break the code"

  52. change suddenly from one tone quality or register to another; "Her voice broke to a whisper when she started to talk about her children"

  53. happen; "Report the news as it develops"; "These political movements recrudesce from time to time" [syn: recrudesce, develop]

  54. become fractured; break or crack on the surface only; "The glass cracked when it was heated" [syn: crack, check]

  55. of the male voice in puberty; "his voice is breaking--he should no longer sing in the choir"

  56. fall sharply; "stock prices broke"

  57. fracture a bone of; "I broke my foot while playing hockey" [syn: fracture]

  58. diminish or discontinue abruptly; "The patient's fever broke last night"

  59. weaken or destroy in spirit or body; "His resistance was broken"; "a man broken by the terrible experience of near-death"

  60. [also: broken, broke]

broke

See break

Wikipedia
Broke

Broke when something is smashed into pieces "broken" - when one has lost all of their money

Broke (album)

Broke is the second studio album by American rap rock band Hed PE. Released on August 22, 2000, the album expanded the band's sound to incorporate classic rock and world music influences. It peaked at #63 on the Billboard 200, and features the band's best known single, "Bartender", which peaked at #23 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and at #27 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart, and appeared on the retrospectives The Best of Hed Planet Earth and Major Pain 2 Indee Freedom: The Best of Hed P.E. The album sold over 250,000 copies.

Broke (The Office)

"Broke" is the 25th episode of the fifth season of the television series The Office, and the 97th overall episode of the series. It originally aired on NBC in the United States on April 23, 2009. In this episode, Michael learns his paper company is broke, and tries to keep this fact a secret when Dunder Mifflin offers to buy out the Michael Scott Paper Company since the company has stolen most of Dunder Mifflin Scranton's clients.

The episode was written by Charlie Grandy and directed by Steve Carell, marking his directorial debut. "Broke" was the last of a six-episode arc involving Michael quitting to start the Michael Scott Paper Company; it was also the last of six episodes to prominently feature Idris Elba as Dunder Mifflin V.P. Charles Miner. According to Nielsen ratings, it was watched by 7.21 million viewers, and received the season's lowest rating in the 18–49 age group during its regular timeslot to that point in the season.

Broke (surname)

Broke is the surname of:

  • Charles Broke Vere (1779–1843), Broke, English army officer at the time of the Napoleonic Wars
  • David Broke or Brooke (c.1498–1560), English judge and Member of Parliament
  • George Broke (born 1946), British Army officer, equerry to the Queen
  • Philip Broke (1776–1841), Royal Navy officer
  • Philip Broke, 2nd Baronet (1804–1855), Royal Navy officer, of the Broke-Middleton baronets
  • Richard Broke (died 1529), English judge
  • Robert Broke (died 1558), British justice, politician and legal writer
  • Simon Broke (fl.1393–1406), English politician
  • Thomas Broke or Brooke (fl.1550), British translator, alderman of Calais
  • William Broke, English 16th-century college and university head

Usage examples of "broke".

Eventually the accountants and lawyers left the room, and Fastow broke into laughter.

One of those green gems broke from the cluster and was swooping down toward the accretion disc.

World War broke down many of the inhibitions of violence and bloodshed that had been built up during the progressive years of the nineteenth century and an accumulating number of intelligent, restless unemployed men, in a new world of motor-cars, telephones, plate-glass shop windows, unbarred country houses and trustful social habits, found themselves faced with illegal opportunities far more attractive than any legal behaviour-system now afforded them.

He broke free, releasing my achy breast to torture the other with the scrape of his teeth.

I grabbed a big sapling and tore it up by the roots and broke it acrost my knee and throwed the pieces clean through a rail fence on the other side of the road.

The next May, this terrible affliction together with hard work completely broke me down and although I was doctoring all the time I kept steadily growing worse.

Swedish majesty, by the advice of the senate, thought proper to refuse complying with this request, alleging, that as the crown of Sweden was one of the principal guarantees of the treaty of Westphalia, it would be highly improper to take such a step in favour of a prince who had not only broke the laws and constitution of the empire, in refusing to furnish his contingent, but had even assisted, with his troops, a power known to be its declared enemy.

It was, of course, the existence of the haploid Flenni generation, which made the diploid Esthaans so healthy-each time the pairs of Esthaan chromosome broke apart to form a Flenn individual, every sort of recessive defect emerged without an allele to temper it.

Soon there was a terrific explosion as the pent-up air of the planetoid broke through its weakening container, and the sluggish river of allotropic ion flowed in an ever larger stream, ever faster.

A cry of alarm and amazement broke from the assemblage, but no word of fear, and in a moment the soldiers and nobles of Zodanga were hurling themselves upon the advancing Tharks.

FSP cruiser as the transport ship broke for the edge of the Ambrosian system.

Dumpling broke the seal and let a small ladle down into the amphora and then tipped the ruby liquid into a goblet, Thiuda peremptorily grabbed the drink, suspiciously smelled of it, sipped of it, rolled it around in his mouth and rolled his eyes as well.

Burke reached forth with his analogue hands, broke one of the fibrils.

In England, because of his extreme Anarchist views, Most broke with Marx and, after serving eighteen months at hard labor for advocating regicide, he emigrated in 1882 to the United States.

The anatomist was still scratching away with his pen when she broke down in sobs.