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Collide   /kəlˈaɪd/   Listen
verb
Collide  v. t.  To strike or dash against. (Obs.) "Scintillations are... inflammable effluencies from the bodies collided."



Collide  v. i.  To strike or dash against each other; to come into collision; to clash; as, the vessels collided; their interests collided. "Across this space the attraction urges them. They collide, they recoil, they oscillate." "No longer rocking and swaying, but clashing and colliding."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Collide" Quotes from Famous Books



... abode of dread things. Each window seems filled with frightful eyes. Each corner, half-lit by a timid gas-jet, seems to harbour unholy features. A black man, with Oriental features, brushes against you. You collide with a creeping yellow man. He says something—it might be Chinese or Japanese or Philippinese jargon. A huge Hindoo shuffles, cat-like, against the shops. A fried-fish bar, its windows covered with Scandinavian phrases, flings a burst of ...
— Nights in London • Thomas Burke

... against each other,—our English interest in the controversy, however huge said controversy grow, is quite trifling; we have only in a handsome manner to say to it: "Tumble and rage along, ye rotten waifs and wrecks; clash and collide as seems fittest to you; and smite each other into annihilation at your own good pleasure. In that huge conflict, dismal but unavoidable, we, thanks to our heroic ancestors, having got so far ahead of you, have now no interest at all. ...
— Latter-Day Pamphlets • Thomas Carlyle

... I'm to go into the Bank some day: and I expect my father thinks I shall be just as big a duffer at that. I know he does. But I'm not, if he'd only trust me a bit. So now if we were to smash up—collide, go off the rails, run over a bridge, or something of that sort—just think how he'd feel when he found out I'd cleared ...
— The White Wolf and Other Fireside Tales • Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch

... the condition; he is aware of his inability to see objects to his right-hand side, and is apt to collide with persons ...
— Surgical Experiences in South Africa, 1899-1900 • George Henry Makins

... such as those of officers of the law chasing an escaped prisoner who had a broken rope tied to his arm, and a collision between two chariots in a narrow street, about the wrecks of which an idle mob gathered as it does to-day if two vehicles collide, while the owners argued, gesticulating angrily, and the police and grooms tried to lift a fallen horse on to its feet. Only no sound of the argument or of anything else reached me. I saw, and that was ...
— She and Allan • H. Rider Haggard


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