Find the word definition

Crossword clues for crushing

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
crushing
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a cruel/devastating/crushing blow (=extremely hard to bear)
▪ Her loss came as a devastating blow to her father.
a crushing victory (=a win by a very large amount)
▪ Australia won a crushing 139-run victory over the West Indies.
a crushing/resounding defeat (=a complete defeat, by a very large amount)
▪ He quit as Prime Minister following a crushing defeat in regional elections.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
blow
▪ And the really crushing blow came when the owner of his star performer, Joveworth, removed the horse from the yard.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Republicans in the state suffered a crushing defeat in last month's elections.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And the really crushing blow came when the owner of his star performer, Joveworth, removed the horse from the yard.
▪ Formby suffered a crushing 10 wicket defeat at home to local rivals Southport.
▪ He had felt betrayed by the visit, after hoping to be lifted out of his crushing depression by it.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Crushing

Crush \Crush\ (kr[u^]sh), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Crushed (kr[u^]sht); p. pr. & vb. n. Crushing.] [OE. cruschen, crousshen, Of. cruisir, croissir, fr. LL. cruscire, prob. of Ger. origin, from a derivative of the word seen in Goth. kruistan to gnash; akin to Sw. krysta to squeeze, Dan. kryste, Icel. kreysta.]

  1. To press or bruise between two hard bodies; to squeeze, so as to destroy the natural shape or integrity of the parts, or to force together into a mass; as, to crush grapes.

    Ye shall not offer unto the Lord that which is bruised, or crushed, or broken, or cut.
    --Lev. xxii. 24.

    The ass . . . thrust herself unto the wall, and crushed Balaam's foot against the wall.
    --Num. xxii. 25.

  2. To reduce to fine particles by pounding or grinding; to comminute; as, to crush quartz.

  3. To overwhelm by pressure or weight; to beat or force down, as by an incumbent weight.

    To crush the pillars which the pile sustain.
    --Dryden.

    Truth, crushed to earth, shall rise again.
    --Bryant.

  4. To oppress or burden grievously.

    Thou shalt be only oppressed and crushed alway.
    --Deut. xxviii. 33.

  5. To overcome completely; to subdue totally.

    Speedily overtaking and crushing the rebels.
    --Sir. W. Scott.

  6. to subdue or overwhelm (a person) by argument or a cutting remark; to cause (a person) to feel chagrin or humiliation; to squelch. To crush a cup, to drink. [Obs.] To crush out.

    1. To force out or separate by pressure, as juice from grapes.

    2. To overcome or destroy completely; to suppress.

Crushing

Crushing \Crush"ing\, a. That crushes; overwhelming. ``The blow must be quick and crushing.''
--Macualay.

Wiktionary
crushing
  1. 1 That crushes; overwhelming. 2 Devastatingly disheartening. n. 1 The action of the verb ''to crush''. 2 A former method of execution. v

  2. (present participle of crush English)

WordNet
crushing

adj. physically or spiritually devastating; often used in combination; "a crushing blow"; "a crushing rejection"; "bone-crushing" [syn: devastating]

crushing

n. forceful prevention; putting down by power or authority; "the suppression of heresy"; "the quelling of the rebellion"; "the stifling of all dissent" [syn: suppression, quelling, stifling]

Wikipedia
Crushing (execution)

Death by crushing or pressing is a method of execution that has a history during which the techniques used varied greatly from place to place, generally involving the placement of intense weight upon a person with the intent to kill. This form of execution is no longer sanctioned by any governing body.

Usage examples of "crushing".

He spoke, and, gathering up his habit, he rushed among the crowd of penguins, pushing, jostling, trampling, and crushing, until he reached the daughter of Alca, whom he seized and suddenly carried in his arms into a cave that had been hollowed out by the sea.

The tier they had vacated tilled wildly, shuddered and finally sheared loose completely, rolling and tumbling down the slope, crushing hundreds of bodies of the thousands of stunned ants that packed the gorge.

Half fell in the bloody pool, crushing several of the Archai who were just climbing out.

Kayak Bill, who had once seen a tidal wave on Bering Sea, pictured it advancing in the grey unnatural night from the far reaches of the ocean, growing larger and larger as it neared the shallows off Kon Klayu, and then, tossing its dancing crest to the sky in gigantic abandon, curling down from aloft in green-white, crushing splendor and flinging itself far over the beachline in its endeavor to encompass them all.

For it was one of her dreams, perhaps the six hundred and seventy-ninth in the series, that one day she would sit at a desk answering innumerable telephone calls with projecting jaw, as millionaires do on the movies, and crushing rivals like blackbeetles in order that, after being reviled by the foolish as a heartless plutocrat, she might hand a gigantic Trust over to the Socialist State.

Why should a decent and kindly writer like Ernest Bramah find the crushing of the proletariat a pleasant vision?

I took several deep breaths, trying simultaneously to control my annoyance and think of some crushing rejoinder.

Bred in a world used to the statistics of the crushing acceleration gravities of rocket spaceflight, Brevis had earlier envisioned their leap towards light-speed velocities would be a prolonged spell of suffering in an acceleration couch.

Kneeling under the table, crushing a crystal goblet with his bare knee, Candlemas was not helpless, but neither was he happy.

For the next two or three minutes, like Gulliver among the Lilliputians, I engaged in battle with this cartoonish troop, swinging the torch in wild arcs, brushing the sweeps off my clothing, crushing the littlest ones underfoot.

The mighty Castalian fleet had been annihilated with great loss of life, while the conquerors had not lost a man and had scarcely interrupted their breakfast in order to secure this crushing triumph.

They are shedding their dead matter in suppurating clots that eddy free and drift up like oil, expanding as the crushing pressure lessens, enveloping and suffocating fish and weed, until what breaks the waves with a mucal slurp is a noisome coagulate of infection and smothered sea-life.

The dinichthys was heading down now, into the realms of crushing pressures its pursuers could not hope to survive.

These weapons are very rare anywhere but in the hands of the world military, using an atomic-powered gravity lens to thrust a crushing shockwave from their disklike forward projector.

Half the city was in flames, or rubble, and the death toll was in the hundreds of thousands, but the uber-espers had won, crushing and dominating the weaker minds of the ELF leaders, who turned out to be only human after all, and therefore limited in the evil they could conceive.