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"bash up" is a grammatically correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is a phrasal verb that means to hit or strike something or someone forcefully and repeatedly. You can use "bash up" in a sentence to describe physical violence or destruction. Here is an example: - The angry protesters began to bash up the police cars, breaking windows and causing chaos in the streets.
Dictionary
bash up
verb
To assault someone with the intention of causing physical injury.
Exact(10)
"I'm not going to bash up anybody... this is ridiculous, absolutely ridiculous".
The sort of people who, when they bash up old ladies in the street, record it on their mobiles to put on YouTube.
The deputy editor offered another way forward: to avoid being closed down, the Guardian would bash up its own computers under GCHQ's tutelage.
A car full of ocker hotheads looking for people to bash up in between smoking cones, sipping on stubbies and comparing tattoos?
These were opposing the government's agenda to "bash up the workers" with its two industrial relations bills, lobbying for a lower backpacker tax, calling for a bank royal commission and supporting the Australian bid for Kidman and Co.
Another Arctic storm is forecast in a few day that may bash up a bit more ice.
Similar(50)
Did you get bashed up in the shoot at all?
"I got bashed up - black eye, bruised nose.
I found a bashed up but brilliant Robert Lowell first edition".
"Yesssss, it got to a state where it was quite bashed up".
A couple of them we bashed up pretty good," Gelfman says, scrolling through digital photographs of himself wielding a sledgehammer.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com