No. Crush is a noun and a verb.
The collective noun is a crush of shoppers.
"Crush" can be a noun (a strong feeling of attraction) or a verb (to press something with force).
Grind
'Crush' has many meanings (squash (drink and compress); longing; crowd;etc.; verb and noun). Please be more specific to enable translation.
No. It is a noun (a vegetable/fruit or a ball game). It can be a verb meaning to smash or crush.
With all apologies, "crush husband" and "crush arm" have no meaning in the English language. "Crush" is a verb meaning to smash or flatten. Informally, it is a noun connoting the object of infatuation. It is not a modifying adjective that can be used with another noun such as "husband" or "arm."
salesmen
Squash is both a verb meaning "to crush" and a noun referring to one kind of yellow vegetable.Note that not all squash are yellow and not all yellow vegetables are squash.
The Verb CrushSynonyms may include smash, flatten, compress, pound, or squeeze.The Slang Noun CrushThe noun usually means infatuation, love, or desire.
The collective noun is a crush of shoppers; the plural form is crushes of shoppers.
crush means when your in love just another word for in love sometimes crush can mean the person they/your like doesn't know (2) 'crush' is quite different from 'love' or 'being in love' -when you have a crush on someone or someone is your crush it means you know from the outset that there is little likelihoood of an ongoing relationship, that there is no reason for thinking your feelings are reciprocated. For example, you might have a crush on someone you see now and again at a bus-stop but have never spoken with, or on a new teacher. The main difference between a crush and love is that a crush is entirely a one-way affair with the crushee usually totally oblivious of the crusher's interest.