Squash in a sentence as a noun

That's about 20 hours less than what most people here have done trying to meet a deadline, or squash a stubborn bug.

Request that the user squash all the commits into a\n > single commit\n > 2.

Judo, BJJ, boxing, squash, tennis, football, badminton... join a sports club, have fun, and you won't even notice yourself getting fitter.

I'm not buying it. Google has the resources to evenly apply guidelines, they're not a one-man show who's too busy to squash out violators.

To summarize without having to watch 2 minutes of video: squash three rows of querty keyboard onto one row and auto-correct.

Squash in a sentence as a verb

And, when things go bad, this infrastructure is sitting there, right above your head, ready to squash you, ready to **** you off unceremoniously.

You have a written record of numbers that they can't ever go below now, and virtually infinite time to squash the butterflies in your stomach and craft your counter-offer.

If I've learnt anything so far it's that lack of follow-through is still a major issue, and the promise of a little money and a partner to work with does not squash the problem as much as I thought it would.

That essentially looks like Somalia or Syria or Libya - total chaos, with constant risk of offending one warlord or another or some gang of bandits, and none of them will make the slightest pretense of listening to you. Avoiding that requires having one government with enough power to squash anybody like that.

... "maybe Im going slightly crazy after 3 days straight hacking" ...Do I interpret this correctly as that the author has not commited any changes for 3 days?With SVN there may be an excuse for this, but with Git the right way is to commit as often as possible, and then squash your commits before pushing them.

Squash definitions

noun

any of numerous annual trailing plants of the genus Cucurbita grown for their fleshy edible fruits

noun

edible fruit of a squash plant; eaten as a vegetable

noun

a game played in an enclosed court by two or four players who strike the ball with long-handled rackets

verb

to compress with violence, out of natural shape or condition; "crush an aluminum can"; "squeeze a lemon"

See also: crush squelch mash squeeze