TOEIC Link Part 5: wreak versus wreck
Wreak and wreck look nearly identical and are often confused, but they play different grammatical roles. Wreak is a verb meaning to cause or inflict, and it lives almost entirely inside the fixed phrase wreak havoc. Wreck is a verb meaning to destroy or ruin, and also a noun for something that has been destroyed. Because the collocation wreak havoc shows up in business and news English, Part 5 uses it to check whether you know the pattern. For the wider set of look-alike traps, start with the commonly confused word pairs master index.
The core rule: inflict versus destroy
- wreak (verb) = to cause or bring about (something harmful). In practice, almost always wreak havoc (on / with): The storm wreaked havoc on the supply chain. / System outages wreaked havoc with the shipping schedule. It is rarely used with any object other than havoc (or occasionally damage, vengeance).
- wreck (verb/noun) = to destroy or ruin; a destroyed thing. As a verb: The scandal wrecked his career. As a noun: Investigators examined the wreck. / The old warehouse was a wreck.
The two overlap in sound and spelling but not in grammar. Wreak needs an object like havoc and describes causing chaos; wreck takes an ordinary object (a career, a car, a plan) and describes destroying it directly.
Why Part 5 likes this pair
The idiom wreak havoc is fixed, and Part 5 swaps in the similar-looking wreck to see if you know the collocation.
A single mislabeled shipment can __ havoc across an entire distribution network.
The object havoc signals the fixed idiom, so the answer is wreak.
The negotiations collapsed, and the failed deal __ed months of careful planning.
Here planning is an ordinary object being destroyed — no havoc — so the answer is wrecked.
Spotting the clue
Ask what the object is:
- Is the object the word havoc (or, rarely, damage / vengeance)? → choose wreak (wreak havoc on operations, wreak havoc with the timetable).
- Is the object an ordinary thing being destroyed or ruined — a plan, a career, a vehicle? → choose wreck (wreck the deal, wreck his reputation).
A quick test settles it: if the word is immediately followed by havoc, you almost always want wreak; if something concrete is being ruined, you want wreck. Note the noun sense belongs only to wreck — a train wreck, never a train wreak. For more pairs where a fixed collocation drives the answer, see the business and finance confusable pairs study guide.
Quick self-check
- Unexpected staff shortages can __ havoc on a project timeline. (wreak — fixed idiom with havoc)
- The typo in the contract nearly __ed the entire partnership. (wreck — destroyed, ordinary object)
- After the flood, the ground floor was a complete __. (wreck — noun, destroyed thing)
Takeaway
If the object is havoc, you need wreak — it is a fixed collocation and rarely appears with anything else. If something ordinary is being destroyed or ruined, or you need a noun for a destroyed thing, you need wreck. Match the word to its object rather than its sound. To see how this pair fits the wider set of Part 5 sound-alikes, return to the commonly confused word pairs master index.