1. torn
Her dress was torn.
It may seem like Tom has forgotten all about the matter, but deep down inside, he's still torn up about it.
Someone has torn two pages out of this book.
The old houses were torn down to make room for a supermarket.
I'm torn between family and work
Imogen of the Internet is torn between filling out the music sections of all her online profiles and ensuring that none of her friends will have ever heard of her favorite bands in order to protect their precious obscurity.
The floor was strewn with party favors: torn noisemakers, crumpled party hats, and dirty Power Ranger plates.
Today young people find themselves, through no fault of their own, living in a world torn by international bitterness and the threat of nuclear destruction.
There used to be a fireplace here but I guess it's been torn down.
You want to be cooperative, but you’re torn
In the past month, three houses, all in good condition, have been torn down.
It's a torn in his side
torn nightgown
An example of torn used as an adjective is the phrase "torn jeans," which means jeans with holes in them.
The government constantly have to issue new bank-notes becausethe old one get dirty and torn.
2. unravelled
3. ripped open
4. ripped
The tourists were ripped off at the nightclub.
Someone has ripped out the first three pages of this book.
The lion ripped the flesh from the dead giraffe.
The house had its roof ripped off by the storm.
The wind ripped the roof off our building.
The jagged edge ripped a hole in his trousers.
I ripped the envelope open.
He ripped up all her letters and photos.
The angry chimp went up the sidewalk and ripped everybody's face off.
My thumbnail ripped off.
5. burst
gullets had burst.
Her heart burst with gladness to see her husband return home from his overseas tour of Iran.
If only I'd sold that property before the economic bubble burst I wouldn't have lost all that money.
Harold's arm bicycle workout was sufficiently vigorous that his pectorals burst into flame.
What was that noise? Did a tyre burst?
There must have been at least ten courses. I thought I was going to burst.
Generally, short bursts of long hours do lead to increases in productivity, but over time those gains disappear,
Three days before Vern burst into the clubhouse, Ray Brower had gone out with one of his mothers buckets to pick wild fruit.
I want to see her burst of red hair and big green eyes.
When he openly declared he would marry Pablo, he almost gave his grandmother a heart attack and made his aunt's eyes burst out of their sockets; however, his little sister beamed with pride.
What Alice, waiting for a reply, was faced with was a sudden howl. It was a resounding noise, sharp as to burst her ear drums, loud as to reach unto the heavens.
The tree roots have burst through the cement at several points along the sidewalk.
It is wonderful to think of Spring, when the new buds of the persimmon burst forth.
The frog inflated himself more and more, until finally he burst.
If you keep eating like this your body will burst open.
Anglais mot "rozpruty"(burst) se produit dans des ensembles:
1984 chapter 1,2,3