Break Definition
 brāk 
  breaking, breaks, broke, broken
  
    verb
  
 
    breaking, breaks, broke, broken
  
To cause to come apart by force; split or crack sharply into pieces; smash; burst.
 Webster's New World 
To divide into pieces, as by bending or cutting.
 Break crackers for a baby.
 American Heritage 
To separate into components or parts.
 Broke the work into discrete tasks.
 American Heritage 
To snap off or detach.
 Broke a twig from the tree.
 American Heritage 
To quarrel; stop associating (with)
 Webster's New World 
Synonyms: 
  
    noun
  
 
    breaks
  
A breaking open or apart; breach; fracture.
 Webster's New World 
The act or an occurrence of breaking.
 American Heritage 
The beginning or emergence of something.
 The break of day.
 American Heritage 
The result of breaking, as a crack, separation, or opening.
 A break in the clouds.
 American Heritage 
A sudden movement; a dash.
 The dog made a break toward the open field.
 American Heritage 
Synonyms: 
  
    idiom
  
 
      break a leg
    
 - Used to wish someone, such as an actor, success in a performance.
 
American Heritage  
      break bread
    
 - To eat together.
 
American Heritage  
      break camp
    
 - To pack up equipment and leave a campsite.
 
American Heritage  
      break cover
    
 - To emerge from a protected location or hiding place: 
The platoon broke cover and headed down the road.
 
American Heritage  
      break even
    
 - To gain an amount equal to that invested, as in a commercial venture.
 
American Heritage  
Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Break
- break a leg
 - break bread
 - break camp
 - break cover
 - break even
 - break ground
 - break new ground
 - break (one's) neck
 - break rank
 - break (someone's) heart
 - break the bank
 - break the buck
 - break the ice
 - break wind
 - break a leg!
 - break away
 - break down
 - break even
 - break in
 - break in on
 - break off
 - break out
 - break service
 - break up
 - give someone a break
 - the breaks
 
Origin of Break
-  
From Middle English breken, from Old English brecan (“to break”), from Proto-Germanic *brekaną (“to break”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰrag-.
From Wiktionary
 -  
Middle English breken from Old English brecan bhreg- in Indo-European roots
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
 
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