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demolished

/dih-mol-ish/US // dɪˈmɒl ɪʃ //UK // (dɪˈmɒlɪʃ) //

被拆除的,被拆毁的,被拆毁,被拆除

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to destroy or ruin, especially on purpose; tear down; raze.
    • : to put an end to; destroy; explode: The results of his research demolished many theories.
    • : to lay waste to; ruin utterly: The fire demolished the area.
    • : Informal. to devour completely: We simply demolished that turkey.

Synonyms & Antonyms

verbdestroy; consume

Examples

  • The 50 passing touchdowns demolished the franchise record of 30 that had been held by Len Dawson since 1964.

  • Coronavirus patients often die alone, the usual rituals for observing death and processing grief demolished by social distancing protocols.

  • The dozer driver had been hired to demolish the house to make way for a parking lot, but the historical society was in negotiations with the Smithsonian Institution to save the Colonial building.

  • They just doubled-down on their investment in National Landing with the purchase of a Marriott hotel at PenPlace for $150 million that they plan to demolish to expand their office space.

  • I always try to keep in mind the events of April 19, 1995, when a truck bomber demolished the federal building in Oklahoma City.

  • The libertarians know Goldwater got demolished in 1964, right?

  • The majority of the slabs that constituted the wall were demolished and used for highway gravel.

  • One shell blast in the middle of the courtyard has demolished the grey brick cobblestones.

  • They dug, demolished, and dismantled The Cathedral brick by brick, looking for the leftovers of Escobar's fortune.

  • Half of the second story has been demolished and replaced by a small memorial building in the shape of a cross.

  • Almost every building in the city was more or less injured, many being utterly demolished.

  • Bruce demolished the castle; whether because it was of the old ineffective type, or because he had no means of holding it.

  • The first shot demolished the top gear of one of the ships, bringing down the men; and the other ships kept a safe distance.

  • He took them across the morass, about a mile wide, over a causeway of branches, which the rear demolished as they passed.

  • The first structures were so ridiculously disproportioned to his strength as to be demolished at once.