Meaning of tear it up | Babel Free
/ˈtɛəɹ ɪt ˈʌp/Definitions
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see tear, it, up.
- To compete extremely well, to trounce the competition.
- To perform with great energy and flair.
- To succeed in a big way.
- To display great energy or force.
- To display sexual prowess.
- To behave with wild abandon; to indulge in sex, drugs, and/or alcohol.
Examples
“Now, where's my Labour membership card, so I can consider whether to tear it up? Blast, it's plastic...”
“Statistics not only help us keep track of who's tearing it up and who's stinking it up, they shape the way we think about the game.”
“You look back at the greatest players and if they were in their prime and in the game now, my goodness gracious. Jerry West would be tearing it up. Elgin would be tearing it up. Oscar Robertson would be tearing it up. Wilt Chamberlain would be tearing it up. You just go down that list. I'm sitting here watching the NBA games every night now, and I know what those guys could do. It's just an enduring greatness.”
“The teenager, as beloved a full-back as any in these parts since Danny McGrain was tearing it up, cut in, shot and saw his attempt deflected in off Sterling's boot. Cue more pandemonium.”
“Dad would see them watching me polishing the leather and he'd call me out on stage and the crowd went wild. Little twelve-year-old girl tearing it up.”
“His Double Trouble started tearing it up all over the world. Was just three guys—Stevie, Tommy Shannon on bass, and Chris Layton on drums—but man, they had a big sound.”
“The Motor City Madman's albums hadn't been selling as well as Cat Scratch Fever a couple of years earlier, but he was still tearing it up Nugent style.”
“I was in Florida doing my investing thing, absolutely tearing it up with huge returns.”
“Butch Guice and Diego Rodriguez are tearing it up, huh? They put across the notion of constant cold so evocatively that expect to be able to see my breath as I read the book.”
“"Hey, Eina, that little brother of yours is really tearing it up"”
“The wind was tearing it up, the waves at least eight to ten feet high as the surf crashed on shore.”
“Here are my eight favorite get-fit foods, based on that research and what's worked best for my clients over the years, along with what makes me feel like tearing it up on my morning run.”
“Made with a few wholesome ingredients but packed with rich, savory flavor, this vegan version of a classic Alfredo sauce will get you out on the dance floor, cutting a rug and tearing it up, especially when it's served over Bodacious Tortelloni (page 102) or another carb-o-licious pasta.”
“Girl, I'll give yo lil ass a nice lil workout. I can carry yo ass all over my spot and tear it up at the same time.”
“My face might have been jacked up from Jaylin, but it surely didn't affect me in any way down below. After I told Stephon about what had happened in court, we got a good laugh and wound up in my bedroom, tearing it up.”
“Then, oh my God, he started hitting a spot that I didn't even know I had. I started screaming at the top of my lungs. He knew he was tearing it up, and that excited him so much that he erupted inside of me, rolled over, and passed out.”
“Carrie told Janie that Melinda saw him in Lansing at a club, and he was tearing it up. Funny, that. Because he seems very, very shy.”
“I knew I wasn't living right, but I'd grown up so sheltered and such a "good girl" that I kind of lost it when I experienced the independence of college life. I'd been tearing it up for a couple of years pretty consistently, but it was getting harder to maintain.”
“I don't know if having two shitty marriages short-circuited my brain or if something inside burst out of its cage while I was on tour with Pantera, but from 1997 to 2000 I was tearing it up in a way that made my dalliances with models and scenesters with John in the early nineties look like I was a fucking altar boy.”
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.