to break to pieces with violence and often with a crashing sound, as by striking, letting fall, or dashing against something; shatter: He smashed the vase against the wall.
to defeat, disappoint, or disillusion utterly.
to hit or strike (someone or something) with force.
to overthrow or destroy something considered as harmful: They smashed the drug racket.
to ruin financially: The depression smashed him.
to hit (a ball or shuttlecock) overhead or overhand with a hard downward motion, causing the shot to move very swiftly and to strike the ground or table usually at a sharp angle.
—v.i.
to break to pieces from a violent blow or collision.
to dash with a shattering or crushing force or with great violence; crash (usually fol. by against, into, through, etc.).
to become financially ruined or bankrupt (often fol. by up).
to flatten and compress the signatures of a book in a press before binding.
—n.
the act or an instance of smashing or shattering.
the sound of such a smash.
a blow, hit, or slap.
a destructive collision, as between automobiles.
a smashed or shattered condition.
a process or state of collapse, ruin, or destruction: the total smash that another war would surely bring.
financial failure or ruin.
See
a drink made of brandy, or other liquor, with sugar, water, mint, and ice.
an overhead or overhand stroke in which the ball or shuttlecock is hit with a hard, downward motion causing it to move very swiftly and to strike the ground or table usually at a sharp angle.
a ball hit with such a stroke.
—adj.
of, relating to, or constituting a great success: That composer has written many smash tunes.