| Noun | 1. | smash - a vigorous blow; "the sudden knock floored him"; "he took a bash right in his face"; "he got a bang on the head"blow, bump - an impact (as from a collision); "the bump threw him off the bicycle" | |
| 2. | smash - a serious collision (especially of motor vehicles)collision - an accident resulting from violent impact of a moving object; "three passengers were killed in the collision"; "the collision of the two ships resulted in a serious oil spill" | |
| 3. | smash - a hard return hitting the tennis ball above your headreturn - a tennis stroke that returns the ball to the other player; "he won the point on a cross-court return" | |
| 4. | smash - the act of colliding with something; "his crash through the window"; "the fullback's smash into the defensive line"hitting, striking, hit - the act of contacting one thing with another; "repeated hitting raised a large bruise"; "after three misses she finally got a hit" | |
| 5. | smash - 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"success - an attainment that is successful; "his success in the marathon was unexpected"; "his new play was a great success" megahit, smash hit, blockbuster - an unsually successful hit with widespread popularity and huge sales (especially a movie or play or recording or novel) sleeper - an unexpected hit; "that movie was the sleeper of the summer" | |
| Verb | 1. | smash - hit hard; "He smashed a 3-run homer"hit - deal a blow to, either with the hand or with an instrument; "He hit her hard in the face" | |
| 2. | smash - break into pieces, as by striking or knocking over; "Smash a plate"smash - break suddenly into pieces, as from a violent blow; "The window smashed" break - destroy the integrity of; usually by force; cause to separate into pieces or fragments; "He broke the glass plate"; "She broke the match" | |
| 3. | smash - reduce to bankruptcy; "My daughter's fancy wedding is going to break me!"; "The slump in the financial markets smashed him" | |
| 4. | smash - hit violently; "She smashed her car against the guard rail"hit, strike - drive something violently into a location; "he hit his fist on the table"; "she struck her head on the low ceiling" | |
| 5. | smash - humiliate or depress completely; "She was crushed by his refusal of her invitation"; "The death of her son smashed her" | |
| 6. | smash - damage or destroy as if by violence; "The teenager banged up the car of his mother"damage - inflict damage upon; "The snow damaged the roof"; "She damaged the car when she hit the tree" | |
| 7. | smash - hit (a tennis ball) in a powerful overhead strokehit - cause to move by striking; "hit a ball" | |
| 8. | smash - collide or strike violently and suddenly; "The motorcycle smashed into the guard rail"clash, collide - crash together with violent impact; "The cars collided"; "Two meteors clashed" | |
| 9. | smash - overthrow or destroy (something considered evil or harmful); "The police smashed the drug ring after they were tipped off"demolish, destroy - defeat soundly; "The home team demolished the visitors" | |
| 10. | smash - break suddenly into pieces, as from a violent blow; "The window smashed"dash, smash - break into pieces, as by striking or knocking over; "Smash a plate" | |
| Adv. | 1. | smash - with a loud crash; "the car went smash through the fence" | |