Escaped
Broke out, maybe.
Skint is one word you might use. "I am so skint".Debt is another, as in "he is in crippling debt".Broke is another word you might use. "Jack was broke".Poor is another word. "The family is very poor".
penniless, short, ruined, bust, bankrupt, impoverished, in the red, insolvent
Job hunting, job exploration, job finding.
Going bankrupt; In the hole; Pay through the nose and money down the drain.
The noun form for the adjective broke is brokenness. The word broke is also the past tense of the verb to break.
broke free from his bonds and jumped on another Huron
break - singular breaking - plural
No, the word 'accidentally' is an adverb, a word that describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Examples:I accidentally broke the gate when I tripped.When I mixed the leftover paints, it created an accidentally beautiful color.
The word 'broke' is already the past tense of the word 'break'.The present perfect tense is 'have broken'.
the answer is broke
No. Broke is usually used as a verb but sometimes by uneducated speakers as an adjective as in "my broke(n) computer." Brake can be a noun.