eigrissn) (transitive or intransitive) to rip [auxiliary håbn] (transitive) to demolish, to tear down [auxiliary håbn] (intransitive) to make a habit of something...
concieō, cieō, peragō, moveō, occīdō, agō, versō, ūrō Antonym: cōnsōlor to demolish, destroy Synonyms: dēstruō, ruīnō, occīdō, dēvāstō, ēvāstō, vāstō, perdō...
will take at least two years. [It was never rebuilt or replaced, and demolished instead.] (intransitive, medicine, of a boil or sore) To be filled with...
or hew out, off, or down excīdō virīlitātem ― I castrate, geld to raze, demolish, lay waste, destroy (figuratively) to extirpate, remove, banish (in a quarry)...
bemoan [it] with me! (transitive, by extension) to knock to the ground, demolish, raze, level, flatten Synonyms: assolō, adaequō, aequō, pariō Conjugation...
drop or lower (something) — see drop, lower to demolish or tear down (a building, etc.) — see demolish to make (someone) despondent or discouraged — see...
pomp Victoria had 17 platforms, but many of the through platforms were demolished in the early 1990s to make way for the Manchester Arena. A procession...
scheme Projects like Pruitt-Igoe were considered irreparably dangerous and demolished. 1996, “Stakes is High”, in Stakes Is High, performed by De La Soul: Experiments...
and round with Jav'lins fill'd. Probably a variant of race, raze (“to demolish; to destroy, obliterate; to scrape as if with a razor”), possibly modelled...
possibly from a combination of Old French galer (“to have fun, to enjoy oneself”) and Old Northern French (Picard) mafrer (“to eat gluttonously”). (Received...