| crushed | | |
| crushed | (adj.) | treated so as to have a permanently wrinkled appearance.; "crushed velvet" |
| broken, crushed, humbled, humiliated, low | (adj.) | subdued or brought low in condition or status.; "brought low"; "a broken man"; "his broken spirit" |
| crush | | |
| crush, crushed leather | (n.) | leather that has had its grain pattern accentuated. |
| crush, jam, press | (n.) | a dense crowd of people. |
| calf love, crush, infatuation, puppy love | (n.) | temporary love of an adolescent. |
| compaction, crunch, crush | (n.) | the act of crushing. |
| crush, oppress, suppress | (v.) | come down on or keep down by unjust use of one's authority.; "The government oppresses political activists" |
| crush, mash, squash, squeeze, squelch | (v.) | to compress with violence, out of natural shape or condition.; "crush an aluminum can"; "squeeze a lemon" |
| beat, beat out, crush, shell, trounce, vanquish | (v.) | come out better in a competition, race, or conflict.; "Agassi beat Becker in the tennis championship"; "We beat the competition"; "Harvard defeated Yale in the last football game" |
| crush | (v.) | break into small pieces.; "The car crushed the toy" |
| crush, demolish, smash | (v.) | humiliate or depress completely.; "She was crushed by his refusal of her invitation"; "The death of her son smashed her" |
| crush, jam | (v.) | crush or bruise.; "jam a toe" |
| break down, crush | (v.) | make ineffective.; "Martin Luther King tried to break down racial discrimination" |
| crush | (v.) | become injured, broken, or distorted by pressure.; "The plastic bottle crushed against the wall" |
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