Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Wreck

Wreck , transitive verb and noun

See 2d & 3d Wreak.

Wreck , noun

[Old English wrak, Anglo-Saxon wrac exile, persecution, misery, from wrecan to drive out, punish; akin to Dutch wrak, adj., damaged, brittle, n., a wreck, wraken to reject, throw off, Icelandic rek a thing drifted ashore, Swedish vrak refuse, a wreck, Danish vrag. See Wreak, transitive verb, and compare Wrack a marine plant.]

1.
The destruction or injury of a vessel by being cast on shore, or on rocks, or by being disabled or sunk by the force of winds or waves; shipwreck.
Hard and obstinate As is a rock amidst the raging floods, 'Gainst which a ship, of succor desolate, Doth suffer wreck, both of herself and goods. — Spenser
2.
Destruction or injury of anything, especially by violence; ruin; as, the wreck of a railroad train.
The wreck of matter and the crush of worlds. — Addison
Its intellectual life was thus able to go on amidst the wreck of its political life. — J. R. Green
3.
The ruins of a ship stranded; a ship dashed against rocks or land, and broken, or otherwise rendered useless, by violence and fracture; as, they burned the wreck.
4.
The remain of anything ruined or fatally injured.
To the fair haven of my native home, The wreck of what I was, fatigued I come. — Cowper
5.
(Law) Goods, etc., which, after a shipwreck, are cast upon the land by the sea. — Bouvier

Wreck , transitive verb

1.
To destroy, disable, or seriously damage, as a vessel, by driving it against the shore or on rocks, by causing it to become unseaworthy, to founder, or the like; to shipwreck.
Supposing that they saw the king's ship wrecked. — Shakespeare
2.
To bring wreck or ruin upon by any kind of violence; to destroy, as a railroad train.
3.
To involve in a wreck; hence, to cause to suffer ruin; to balk of success, and bring disaster on.
Weak and envied, if they should conspire, They wreck themselves. — Daniel

Wreck , intransitive verb

1.
To suffer wreck or ruin. — Milton
2.
To work upon a wreck, as in saving property or lives, or in plundering.