In the morning when you get up you should 'break your fast' and have some 'breakfast' to eat.
Use "too" when you mean "also." Clearly, you mean "have a good break also." So use "have a good break, too." You would use "to" if you were saying something like "have a good break to catch up on your sleep." The word "to" would almost always have to be followed by something.
"I didn't break it!" I break something every time I touch something.
Break is already a verb. For example "to break something" or "to have a break from something or someone" is an action and therefore a verb.
That probably depends how you break it. I guess you would usually break something by hitting it with something. In that case, the force is applied by the object that hits it.
Something that will break down naturally is called bio-degradable.
Think of something you all like or something really catchy but cool that distinguishes you. Also it can be something special that you all have in common or a name from a good memory you had.
It depends on the type of break up. Usually, whenever something bad happens, something good happens. Whenever something good happens, well, there's always a catch to it. For example, you broke up with the cutest boy in school because of a huge fight and you still love him. That's bad. He apologizes and wants you back. That's good. You break up a guy because he cheats on you. He gets in trouble. Eventually good (for me). He blames on you. They believe him. Bad. So you see, it depends on what type of break up you had. But when I said that I didn't mean if you help someone out something bad will happen to you. It depends on your actions and your choices, too.
A record
Let's Build Something to Break was created on 2009-08-11.
Maybe she's saying your better than her, or maybe she did something wrong.
A bottle with something in it that "looked a lot like gin", is used to break a spell in the novel "Breaking a Spell" by by W.W. Jacobs (1863-1943).
a defect, a blemish, a break, a crack, a fault or an error. Something that detracts from the correctness of anything. something that has a break in it you can say.