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Wrecking   /rˈɛkɪŋ/   Listen
Wrecking

noun
1.
The event of a structure being completely demolished and leveled.  Synonym: razing.
2.
Destruction achieved by causing something to be wrecked or ruined.  Synonyms: laying waste, ruin, ruination, ruining.



Wreck

verb
1.
Smash or break forcefully.  Synonyms: bust up, wrack.



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"Wrecking" Quotes from Famous Books



... shape. One wind wheel was broken by a tornado in 1870, and another in 1881 from same cause. Aside from these two, which cost $250 each, and a month's lost time, the power did not cost over $10 a year for repairs. In July, 1833, a cyclone passed over this section, wrecking my will as well as everything else in its track, and having (out of the profits of the wind mill) purchased a large water and steam flouring mill here, I last fall moved the wind mill out to Dakota, where ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 446, July 19, 1884 • Various

... future after their conception. The delegates could look only to moral power for the execution of their far-reaching plans, yet they spurned the means of acquiring it. The best construction one can put upon their action will represent it as the wrecking of the substance by the form. By establishing a situation of force throughout Europe the Council created and sanctioned the principle that it ...
— The Inside Story Of The Peace Conference • Emile Joseph Dillon

... they represent, and, with St. Augustin, most of them do not recognize such feelings in the "pagan savage." Moreover, while early Christianity, like all other religions, was an appeal to the broadly human feelings of mutual aid and sympathy, the Christian Church has aided the State in wrecking all standing institutions of mutual aid and support which were anterior to it, or developed outside of it; and, instead of the mutual aid which every savage considers as due to his kinsman, it has preached charity which bears a character of inspiration from above, and, accordingly, ...
— Mutual Aid • P. Kropotkin

... six feet wide, and another in the roof. I had scarcely done examining these phenomena when another crash shook the whole building, and we found that an infernal machine had been exploded in the House of Commons, tearing the doors off their hinges, wrecking the galleries, and smashing the Treasury Bench into matchwood. The French Ambassador, M. Waddington, entered the House with me, and for a while stood silent and amazed. At length he said, "There's no other country in the world where ...
— Fifteen Chapters of Autobiography • George William Erskine Russell

... faked story a mile away, and that, anyhow, all the good stunts had been pulled off. I agreed with him. I remember saying that nothing but a railroad wreck or a murder hit the public very hard these days, and that I didn't feel like wrecking the Pennsylvania Limited. ...
— The Case of Jennie Brice • Mary Roberts Rinehart


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