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Synonyms
crash1 (krăsh)

[Middle English crasschenprobably akin to crasen, to shatter; see craze.]

verb: crashed, crash·ing, crash·es. 

intransitive verb 

    1. To break violently or noisily; smash.
    2. To undergo sudden damage or destruction on impact: Their car crashed into a guardrail. The airplane crashed over the ocean.
  1. To make a sudden loud noise: breakers crashing against the rocks.
  2. To move noisily or so as to cause damage: went crashing through the woods.
  3. To undergo a sudden severe downturn, as a market or economy.
  4. Computer Science To stop functioning due to a crash.
  5. Slang To undergo a period of unpleasant feeling or depression as an aftereffect of drug-taking.
  6. Slang
    1. To find temporary lodging or shelter, as for the night.
    2. To go to sleep.

transitive verb 

  1. To cause to crash.
  2. To dash to pieces; smash.
  3. Informal To join or enter (a party, for example) without invitation.

noun 

  1. A sudden loud noise, as of an object breaking.
    1. A smashing to pieces.
    2. A collision, as between two automobiles. See synonyms at collision
  2. A sudden severe downturn: a market crash; a population crash.
  3. Computer Science
    1. A sudden failure of a hard drive caused by damaging contact between the head and the storage surface, often resulting in the loss of data on the drive.
    2. A sudden failure of a program or operating system, usually without serious consequences.
  4. Slang Mental depression after drug-taking.

adjective 

Informal
Of or characterized by an intensive effort to produce or accomplish: a crash course on income-tax preparation; a crash diet.

idioms

crash and burn
To fail utterly. To fall asleep from exhaustion. To wipe out, as in skateboarding.

derivatives

crash́er
noun
crash2 (krăsh)

[From Russian krashenina, colored linen, from krashenie, coloring, from krasit', to color.]

noun 

  1. A coarse, light, unevenly woven fabric of cotton or linen, used for towels and curtains.
  2. Starched reinforced fabric used to strengthen a book binding or the spine of a bound book.