tear up

verb
/ˈtɛəɹ ˈʌp/US/ˈtɛəɹ ˈʌp/UK/ˈtɪɹ ˈʌp/US/ˈtɪəɹ ˈʌp/UK

Etymology

See: tear (“liquid that falls from the eyes”).

Definitions

  1. To tear into pieces.

    • The student tore up his test after he found out his mark of 20%.
  2. To cancel or annul, or to cause the cancellation or annulment of (e.g. an agreement or…

    To cancel or annul, or to cause the cancellation or annulment of (e.g. an agreement or contract).

    • I finally persuaded the landlord to tear up the lease and move to a month-by-month rental.
  3. To damage.

    • The lacrosse practice really tore up the field.
    • You talk about the same thing but from different points of view. He is saying, "Didn't hurt the car much." You're saying "He's tearing up the car and we're having to make payments on it."
    • We were making a joke about him not tearing it up; because the first person that puts a dent in it is going to get in trouble.
  4. + 5 more definitions
    1. To succeed dramatically in (an area of endeavor) or against.

      • In his first year, his hitting tore up the league's opposing pitchers.
      • Taking advantage of her haughty obliviousness—Faris is every bit Margaret Dumont to Baron Cohen’s Groucho—Aladeen conspires to seize power back and tear up the new constitution before it’s too late.
    2. To wrench out of the ground.

      • We tore up the weeds from the allotment.
      • There was another incline on this section, but it has not been in use for very many years, and some of the rails are torn up, and the rest very overgrown.
    3. To have intense penetrative sex with.

      • Chad tore up Stacy after that party.
    4. To brutally assault.

      • Jason tore up Todd after finding out that he was having sex with his sister.
    5. To start shedding tears.

      • After seeing Johnny tear up at that cheesy movie, I knew he was a loser.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for tear up. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA