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Pructus Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Go crash

Hello...

Dictionary says that “crash” is a verb or noun or an adjective.

An adjective as in,

adj.
22. characterized by an intensive effort, esp. to deal with an emergency, meet a deadline, etc.: a crash plan for floodrelief; a crash diet.

But I came across this sentence: The glass went crash.

Does this mean “The glass broke”?
Or “The glass hit something”?

Other than the meaning of it, is “go crash” grammatical, when “crash” is a noun or a verb or an adjective?
  

Top answer

pructus The glass went crash. " In other words, the glass made a crashing sound (and it broke). Here "crash" is used to imitate the sound of breaking glass.

  • pructus The glass went crash.
  • " In other words, the glass made a crashing sound (and it broke).
  • Here "crash" is used to imitate the sound of breaking glass.
  • CJ
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2 Answers
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pructusThe glass went crash.
That's another way of writing The glass went "Crash!"

In other words, the glass made a crashing sound (and it broke). Here "crash" is used to imitate the sound of breaking glass.

CJ
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Oh, I see... I see....
That's a new discovery...

Thanks so mcuh, CJ!!

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