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  1. Dictionary
    crack
    /krak/

    noun

    verb

    adjective

    • 1. very good, especially at a specified activity or in a specified role: "he is a crack shot"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to break something so that it does not separate, but very thin lines appear on its surface, or to become broken in this way: A stone hit the window and cracked the glass. I cracked my tooth as I fell. The walls cracked and the roof collapsed in the earthquake. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to break.

  3. The meaning of CRACK is to make a very sharp explosive sound. How to use crack in a sentence.

  4. 37 meanings: 1. to break or cause to break without complete separation of the parts 2. to break or cause to break with a sudden.... Click for more definitions.

  5. Crack definition: to break without complete separation of parts; become fissured. See examples of CRACK used in a sentence.

  6. A crack is a very narrow space, chink, or opening. If your favorite mug has a crack in it, it might leak. A crack can be as thin as a pencil line, or a wider gap, like a crack where your foot gets stuck as you climb down the side of a mountain.

  7. to break something so that it does not separate, but very thin lines appear on its surface, or to become broken in this way: Linda cracked her tooth when she fell. The concrete had started to crack. cracked dishes.

  8. Definition of crack verb in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. crack meaning, definition, what is crack: to break or to make something break, eit...: Learn more.

  10. [countable] crack (in something) a line on the surface of something where it has broken but not split into separate parts. This cup has a crack in it. Cracks began to appear in the walls. (figurative) The cracks (= faults) in the government's economic policy are already beginning to show.

  11. crack. (krăk) v.cracked, crack·ing, cracks. v.intr. 1. a. To break without complete separation of parts: The mirror cracked. b. To break or snap apart: The branch cracked off and fell. 2. To make a sharp snapping sound: His knees cracked as he sat down. 3. a. To break down; fail: The defendant's composure finally began to crack. b.

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