释义 |
knacker verb- to ruin; to kill UK, 1887
From the conventional sense (to slaughter a horse). - "I’ll knacker him for life," Jock shouted. — Troy Kennedy Martin, Z Cars, p. 37, 1962
- Or was there something really going on in those strange moments before JO came back and knackered it? — Christopher Brookmyre, Not the End of the World, p. 189, 1998
- to steal IRELAND, 1998
- We know who ye are. But we knew that they didn’t and that some young fella in Rathbawn who had a name for knackering Opels would be getting a wake-up call in a few hours. — Eamonn Sweeney, Waiting for the Healer, p. 145, 1997
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