to go broke
61BROKE, SIR PHILIP BOWES VERE — rear admiral, born at Ipswich, celebrated for the action between his ship Shannon, 38 guns, and the American ship Chesapeake, 49 guns, in June 1813, in which he boarded the latter and ran up the British flag; one of the most brilliant naval… …
62Broke — out of money …
63Broke to the wide — out of money; bankrupt …
64broke — Australian Slang out of money …
65broke to the wide — Australian Slang out of money; bankrupt …
66broke — brəʊk adj. poor, impoverished, having no money breɪk n. fracture; pause, intermission; crack; opportunity; alteration; divider between one part of a document and another (Computers) v. smash into pieces, shatter, crack; be smashed into pieces; …
67broke an oath — canceled a pledge, made it unnecessary to fulfill a pledge …
68broke apart — were separated from one another, lost contact with each other …
69broke down — collapsed, shattered; went out of working order, got ruined …
70broke his bones — fractured part of his skeleton …