Smash in a sentence as a noun

Use a pawn-shop electric guitar to smash the **** out of their interview room.

Until the next smash product line that's not from his lips to Apple's ears, I don't know that Apple is going to be fine.

How many billions in damages have been caused by stack smashing and buffer overflows?

It's a decently powerful language that you can do cool things in if you find a good rock and smash the right things in the right places.

Death date showing up on Google isn't a train smash, but if some government agency decides that Google is smarter than them?

I'm going to ignore that they're not the same person and pretend that if you smash them together like play-doh you get a single hypocrite.

Smash in a sentence as a verb

Any time someone asks you to roll your own encryption pinch yourself and smash your head on the desk, if you still want to code it smash your head again.

They not only yell at each other, but actually punch each other, and occasionally stab or smash bottles over each others' heads.

Since they couldn't remember the perfect gas law they instead drop the barometer from the roof and time how long it takes to smash into the ground below.

They wait a couple hours until he passes out, then smash open the doors and windows and taze him repeatedly, pretty much just for fun, to be the bullies they are.

There's no excuse for not hiding your administrative tools, generally the soft underbelly of the whole smash, from the Internet.

If you tried to force the magnet close to the aluminum at speed it would resist so strongly that you never managed to smash it into it with any kind of effectiveness.

Smash in a sentence as an adverb

In fact, any decent human being would be enraged at a giant corporation using its power to smash a little guy to make a few thousand more per employee a year.

You said: * No carry-on suit cases\n\nAnd then you said: * Trying to smash your carry on into an already full overhead bin\n\nAre you sure this isn't just a list of your air travel pet peeves?

You win."?It's not smug when Ballmer dismisses every Apple product when it's released only to watch that product become a smash hit?Don't get me wrong Gruber's smug as all **** in this piece but Apple itself?

Focusing only on the atoms to evade responsibility for the value lost in smashing the glass suggests you don't recognize the value of the unbroken glass, which is nonsense.

When you recall their once-titanic power, their vicious business culture, their decade-long seizure and stagnation of the entire web, the way they openly eat their own with gusto, and the incalculable amounts of money and effort thrown into the boundless swamps of their fetid platforms, you realize that watching them tumble and smash on the rocks below is never, ever, ever going to get old.

Smash definitions

noun

a vigorous blow; "the sudden knock floored him"; "he took a bash right in his face"; "he got a bang on the head"

See also: knock bash bang belt

noun

a serious collision (especially of motor vehicles)

See also: smash-up

noun

a hard return hitting the tennis ball above your head

See also: overhead

noun

the act of colliding with something; "his crash through the window"; "the fullback's smash into the defensive line"

See also: crash

noun

a conspicuous success; "that song was his first hit and marked the beginning of his career"; "that new Broadway show is a real smasher"; "the party went with a bang"

See also: smasher strike bang

verb

hit hard; "He smashed a 3-run homer"

See also: nail boom blast

verb

break into pieces, as by striking or knocking over; "Smash a plate"

See also: dash

verb

reduce to bankruptcy; "My daughter's fancy wedding is going to break me!"; "The slump in the financial markets smashed him"

See also: bankrupt ruin break

verb

hit violently; "She smashed her car against the guard rail"

verb

humiliate or depress completely; "She was crushed by his refusal of her invitation"; "The death of her son smashed her"

See also: crush demolish

verb

damage or destroy as if by violence; "The teenager banged up the car of his mother"

verb

hit (a tennis ball) in a powerful overhead stroke

verb

collide or strike violently and suddenly; "The motorcycle smashed into the guard rail"

verb

overthrow or destroy (something considered evil or harmful); "The police smashed the drug ring after they were tipped off"

verb

break suddenly into pieces, as from a violent blow; "The window smashed"

adverb

with a loud crash; "the car went smash through the fence"

See also: smashingly