crack
Transitive VerbIntransitive Verb[C/U] Both
pl: crackspast: crackedpp: crackeding: cracking
The word evokes a sense of sudden failure or rupture. It carries a sharp, percussive energy, whether it is the physical sound of a snap or the mental collapse of a person. There is an inherent feeling of fragility and the moment of transition from wholeness to brokenness. In a professional or intellectual context, it shifts toward the idea of penetration. To crack a code or a case suggests breaking through a barrier of secrecy to reveal the truth, turning the concept of breaking into a positive achievement of discovery.
Countable when referring to a physical fissure in a wall. Uncountable when referring to the act of breaking or the state of being fractured.