From <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> + -ness. <span class="searchmatch">brokeness</span> (uncountable) The characteristic of being <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>; having no money. Translations brokenness...
commission. He was <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> and rendered unfit to serve His Majesty at sea. brokeass <span class="searchmatch">brokeness</span> broker than the Ten Commandments go for <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> greenbroke gunbroke...
hell <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> loose, all hell breaks loose all hell <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> loose simple past of all hell breaks loose The second he stepped into the venue, all hell <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> loose...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">Brokeš</span> <span class="searchmatch">brokes</span> third-person singular simple present indicative of <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> böreks, bosker, Kobers, Boreks, boreks...
also: <span class="searchmatch">brokes</span> IPA(key): [ˈbrokɛʃ] <span class="searchmatch">Brokeš</span> m anim (female equivalent Brokešová) a male surname Declension of <span class="searchmatch">Brokeš</span> (soft masculine animate) “<span class="searchmatch">Brokeš</span>”, in...
English phrasebook my condom <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> Indicates that the condom of the speaker <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>. indicates that the condom of the speaker <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>...
See also: stone <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> stone-<span class="searchmatch">broke</span> Alternative form of stone <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>. “stone-<span class="searchmatch">broke</span>”, in OneLook Dictionary Search. “<span class="searchmatch">broke</span>, adj.”, in OED Online , Oxford:...
<span class="searchmatch">broked</span> simple past and past participle of <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> Borked, borked...
motto. go for <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> (third-person singular simple present goes for <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>, present participle going for <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>, simple past went for <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>, past participle...
See also: stony-<span class="searchmatch">broke</span> stony-<span class="searchmatch">broke</span> From stony (“like a stone”) + <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>, after earlier stone <span class="searchmatch">broke</span>. stony <span class="searchmatch">broke</span> (not comparable) (UK and Australia, slang)...