wreak
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verb with object
cause (a large amount of damage or harm):
⦅かたく⦆ «…に» 〈損害など〉をもたらす
e.g. torrential rainstorms wreaked havoc yesterday
e.g. the environmental damage wreaked by ninety years of phosphate mining.
inflict (vengeance):
〈復讐(しゅう)・罰など〉を加える «on»
e.g. they would soon have a chance to wreak their revenge on the enemy.
archaic avenge (someone who has been wronged):
e.g. grant me some knight to wreak me for my son.
DERIVATIVES
wreaker noun
ORIGIN
Old English wrecan‘drive (out), avenge’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch wreken and German rächen; compare with wrack4, wreck, and wretch.
USAGE
The phrase wrought havoc, as in they wrought havoc on the countryside, is an acceptable variant of wreaked havoc. Here, wrought is an archaic past tense of work. It is not, as is sometimes assumed, a past tense of wreak.