Broke
Meaning: Very common informal term meaning to have no money, used across all registers.
'Broke' is the universal American slang for having no money. It can range from temporarily cash-poor ('I'm broke until payday') to genuinely destitute. 'Going broke' means losing all your money. It's one of the most commonly used slang terms in American English.
Examples
- I can't go out — I'm completely broke until Friday. 我出不了门——周五之前彻底没钱了。No puedo salir — estoy completamente sin blanca hasta el viernes.出かけられないよ——金曜まで完全に金欠なんだ。나갈 수 없어 — 금요일까지 완전 빈털터리야.
- College students are always broke. 大学生永远都是没钱的。Los universitarios siempre están sin blanca.大学生はいつも金欠だ。대학생은 항상 빈털터리야.
- That lawsuit nearly made the company go broke. 那场官司差点让那家公司破产。Esa demanda casi lleva a la empresa a la quiebra.あの訴訟でその会社は倒産寸前になった。그 소송 때문에 회사가 거의 파산할 뻔했다.
Pronunciation
Usage Guide
Context: everyday conversation, humor, complaining
Tone: resigned, humorous
✓ Do Say
- I'm broke as a joke.我穷得叮当响。Estoy más tieso que la mojama.笑っちゃうくらい金欠だよ。나 완전 빈털터리야.
- We're all broke together.咱们一起穷呗。Estamos todos sin blanca.みんな一緒に金欠だ。우리 다 같이 빈털터리지 뭐.
✗ Don't Say
- Can be insensitive to say about someone in genuine poverty — it's most appropriate as self-deprecating humor用来形容真正处于贫困中的人可能不太妥当——最适合用于自嘲式的幽默Puede resultar insensible decirlo sobre alguien en verdadera pobreza — es más apropiado como humor autodespreciativo本当に貧困状態にある人に対して使うと無神経になりうる——自虐的なユーモアとして使うのが最も適切진짜 가난한 사람에 대해 쓰면 무신경할 수 있다 — 자기 비하 유머로 쓰는 게 가장 적절하다
Origin & History
From 'broken' — as in financially ruined. Used in English since the 1700s. Originally referred to bankrupt merchants. Now used casually for any degree of being short on cash.
Cultural Context
Era: 1700s onwards
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
More From This Topic
More from Money & Hustle
Flashcards, quizzes, audio pronunciation & spaced repetition — all free