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Thrashing   /θrˈæʃɪŋ/   Listen
Thrashing

noun
1.
A sound defeat.  Synonyms: debacle, drubbing, slaughter, trouncing, walloping, whipping.
2.
The act of inflicting corporal punishment with repeated blows.  Synonyms: beating, drubbing, lacing, licking, trouncing, whacking.



Thrash

verb
(past & past part. thrashed; pres. part. thrashing)
1.
Give a thrashing to; beat hard.  Synonyms: flail, lam, thresh.
2.
Move or stir about violently.  Synonyms: convulse, jactitate, slash, thrash about, thresh, thresh about, toss.
3.
Dance the slam dance.  Synonyms: mosh, slam, slam dance.
4.
Beat so fast that (the heart's) output starts dropping until (it) does not manage to pump out blood at all.
5.
Move data into and out of core rather than performing useful computation.
6.
Beat the seeds out of a grain.  Synonym: thresh.
7.
Beat thoroughly and conclusively in a competition or fight.  Synonyms: bat, clobber, cream, drub, lick.



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"Thrashing" Quotes from Famous Books



... you any good in the end, Peter. Thrashing me won't give you and your father the right to usurp rights ...
— Hiram The Young Farmer • Burbank L. Todd

... with a swallow's swiftness—one glimpse of what we had come so far and paid so dear to see: the masts and rigging of a brig pencilled on heaven, with an ensign streaming at the main, and the ragged ribbons of a topsail thrashing from the yard. Again and again, with toilful searching, I recalled that apparition. There was no sign of any land; the wreck stood between sea and sky, a thing the most isolated I had ever viewed; but as we drew nearer, I perceived her to be defended by a line of breakers ...
— The Wrecker • Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne

... of her lodgers. "Arrest them, Anderson! Lock them up at once. They're dangerous people. They oughtn't to be running at large. Oh, that awful thing! It sounds like it was twenty feet long, and it's thrashing all over the room. Oh, my God! What a scare I've had! Oh, you needn't look at me innocent like that, you two. You're in for it, or my name ain't Jennie Bloomer. Call a posse, Anderson, and surround the hotel. Thank Heaven, the door of that room is locked, but goodness knows how soon it ...
— Anderson Crow, Detective • George Barr McCutcheon

... out, he heard Mr. Bell striding across the room and thrashing the furniture about. "Poor old gentleman!" thought he. "I hope I shall succeed in convincing him how little I value money in comparison with righting this wrong, as far as possible. Alas! it would never have taken place had there not been a great antecedent wrong; and that again ...
— A Romance of the Republic • Lydia Maria Francis Child

... just being hatched in their brains... you understand? That is, no one ventured to say it aloud, because the idea is too absurd and especially since the arrest of that painter, that bubble's burst and gone for ever. But why are they such fools? I gave Zametov a bit of a thrashing at the time—that's between ourselves, brother; please don't let out a hint that you know of it; I've noticed he is a ticklish subject; it was at Luise Ivanovna's. But to-day, to-day it's all cleared up. That Ilya Petrovitch is at the ...
— Crime and Punishment • Fyodor Dostoyevsky


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