[f. WRECK sb.1 + -FUL.] Causing shipwreck, ruin or disaster; dangerous, destructive.
1596. Spenser, F. Q., VI. viii. 36. Straungers which on their border Were brought by wreckfull wynde.
1810. Scott, Lady of L., V. i. The wreckful storms that cloud the brow of War.
1848. J. C. Mangan, Poems (1903), 106. This dull world still slumbers . In a midnight dream, Drifts it down Times wreckful stream.
1876. Tennyson, Harold, III. i. 51. A summer mere with sudden wreckful gusts From a side-gorge.