break vs form

break

noun
  • A scheduled interval of days or weeks between periods of school instruction; a holiday. 

  • The transition area between a singer's vocal registers; the passaggio. 

  • A significant change in circumstance, attitude, perception, or focus of attention. 

  • An interval or intermission between two parts of a performance, for example a theatre show, broadcast, or sports game. 

  • A place where waves break (that is, where waves pitch or spill forward creating white water). 

  • A sharp bit or snaffle. 

  • The number of points scored by one player in one visit to the table. 

  • An area along a river that features steep banks, bluffs, or gorges (e.g., Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument, US). 

  • A section of extended repetition of the percussion break to a song, created by a hip-hop DJ as rhythmic dance music. 

  • A temporary split with a romantic partner. 

  • The point in the musical scale at which a woodwind instrument is designed to overblow, that is, to move from its lower to its upper register. 

  • A change, particularly the end of a spell of persistent good or bad weather. 

  • A keystroke or other signal that causes a program to terminate or suspend execution. 

  • A rest or pause, usually from work. 

  • The counter-attack. 

  • A short holiday. 

  • An instance of breaking something into two or more pieces. 

  • A physical space that opens up in something or between two things. 

  • A sudden fall in prices on the stock exchange. 

  • The beginning (of the morning). 

  • A game won by the receiving player(s). 

  • An act of escaping. 

  • The first shot in a game of billiards. 

  • The curve imparted to the ball's motion on the green due to slope or grass texture. 

  • A time for students to talk or play between lessons. 

  • The separation between lines, paragraphs or pages of a written text. 

  • The start of a horse race. 

  • A short section of music, often between verses, in which some performers stop while others continue. 

verb
  • To go down, in terms of temperature, indicating that the most dangerous part of the illness has passed. 

  • To become deeper at puberty. 

  • To terminate the execution of a program before normal completion. 

  • To become weakened in constitution or faculties; to lose health or strength. 

  • To interrupt or cease one's work or occupation temporarily; to go on break. 

  • To make an abrupt or sudden change; to change gait. 

  • To demote; to reduce the military rank of. 

  • To counter-attack. 

  • To burst forth; to make its way; to come into view. 

  • To open (a safe) without using the correct key, combination, or the like. 

  • To become audible suddenly. 

  • To interrupt; to destroy the continuity of; to dissolve or terminate. 

  • To be crushed, or overwhelmed with sorrow or grief. 

  • To turn an animal into a beast of burden. 

  • Of prices on the stock exchange: to fall suddenly. 

  • To cause the shell of (an egg) to crack, so that the inside (yolk) is accessible. 

  • To cause (a barrier) to no longer bar. 

  • To ruin financially. 

  • To disclose or make known an item of news, a band, etc. 

  • To change a steady state abruptly. 

  • To surpass or do better than (a specific number); to do better than (a record), setting a new record. 

  • To destroy the official character and standing of; to cashier; to dismiss. 

  • To end the run of (a play). 

  • To render (a game) unchallenging by altering its rules or exploiting loopholes or weaknesses in them in a way that gives a player an unfair advantage. 

  • To cause (some feature of a program or piece of software) to stop functioning properly; to cause a regression. 

  • To destroy the arrangement of; to throw into disorder; to pierce. 

  • To (attempt to) disengage and flee to; to make a run for. 

  • To begin or end. 

  • To suddenly become. 

  • To win a game (against one's opponent) as receiver. 

  • To make the first shot; to scatter the balls from the initial neat arrangement. 

  • To demulsify. 

  • To end (a connection); to disconnect. 

  • To destroy the strength, firmness, or consistency of. 

  • To divide (something, often money) into smaller units. 

  • To arrive. 

  • To cause (a person or animal) to lose spirit or will; to crush the spirits of. 

  • To interrupt (a fall) by inserting something so that the falling object does not (immediately) hit something else beneath. 

  • To separate into two or more pieces, to fracture or crack, by a process that cannot easily be reversed for reassembly. 

  • To crack or fracture (bone) under a physical strain. 

  • To stop, or to cause to stop, functioning properly or altogether. 

  • To alter in type due to emotion or strain: in men, generally to go up, in women, sometimes to go down; to crack. 

  • To collapse into surf, after arriving in shallow water. 

  • To end. 

  • To remove one of the two men on (a point). 

  • To suspend the execution of a program during debugging so that the state of the program can be investigated. 

  • To violate; to fail to adhere to. 

  • To cause, or allow the occurrence of, a line break. 

  • To B-boy; to breakdance. 

form

noun
  • A class or year of school pupils (often preceded by an ordinal number to specify the year, as in sixth form). 

  • A specific way of performing a movement. 

  • A quantic. 

  • Constitution; mode of construction, organization, etc.; system. 

  • Show without substance; empty, outside appearance; vain, trivial, or conventional ceremony; conventionality; formality. 

  • A specimen document to be copied or imitated. 

  • A grouping of words which maintain grammatical context in different usages; the particular shape or structure of a word or part of speech. 

  • A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. 

  • Level of performance. 

  • Regularity, beauty, or elegance. 

  • The combination of planes included under a general crystallographic symbol. It is not necessarily a closed solid. 

  • A window or dialogue box. 

  • Characteristics not involving atomic components. 

  • A thing that gives shape to other things as in a mold. 

  • Established method of expression or practice; fixed way of proceeding; conventional or stated scheme; formula. 

  • The boundary line of a material object. In painting, more generally, the human body. 

  • A criminal record; loosely, past history (in a given area). 

  • The inherent nature of an object; that which the mind itself contributes as the condition of knowing; that in which the essence of a thing consists. 

  • An order of doing things, as in religious ritual. 

  • The shape or visible structure of a thing or person. 

  • The den or home of a hare. 

  • An infraspecific rank. 

verb
  • To provide (a hare) with a form. 

  • To assume (a certain shape or visible structure). 

  • To mould or model by instruction or discipline. 

  • To constitute, to compose, to make up. 

  • To put together or bring into being; assemble. 

  • To treat (plates) to prepare them for introduction into a storage battery, causing one plate to be composed more or less of spongy lead, and the other of lead peroxide. This was formerly done by repeated slow alternations of the charging current, but later the plates or grids were coated or filled, one with a paste of red lead and the other with litharge, introduced into the cell, and formed by a direct charging current. 

  • To give (a shape or visible structure) to a thing or person. 

  • To create (a word) by inflection or derivation. 

  • To take shape. 

How often have the words break and form occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )