| 释义 | 
		ship·wreck I. \ˈshiˌprek\ noun Etymology: alteration (influenced by wreck) of earlier shipwrack, from Middle English schipwrak, from Old English scipwræc, from scip ship + wræc something driven by the sea — more at ship, wrack 1.  : a wrecked ship or its parts : wreckage 2.  : the destruction or loss (as by sinking or being cast ashore or driven against rocks or shoals) of a ship 3.  : an irretrievable loss or failure : ruin, destruction  < the conference nearly ended in shipwreck — New Statesman & Nation >  < the shipwreck of her marriage — Judith Heller >  < the shipwreck of our hopes — Harrison Smith > II. transitive verb 1.   a.  : to cause (as sailors or passengers) to experience shipwreck   < they too were shipwrecked in another great mystery of the sea — W.E.Swinton >  b.  : to afflict with disaster or loss : ruin   < shipwrecked his career — C.L.Jones >   < the human animal, nearly shipwrecked, will turn toward some means to save itself — J.S.Collis > 2.  : to destroy (a ship) by driving ashore or upon rocks or sandbanks or causing to founder by the force of wind and waves  < our little float was shipwrecked — Daniel Defoe > intransitive verb 1. obsolete  : to experience shipwreck : to become shipwrecked 2.  : to suffer ruin or failure  < hopes not to shipwreck in his business venture > |