Definition of 'hit'
Word forms: hits, hittinglanguage note: The form hit is used in the present tense and is the past and present participle.
1. transitive verb
If you hit someone or something, you deliberately touch them with a lot of force, with your
hand or an object held in your hand.
2. transitive verb
When one thing hits another, it touches it with a lot of force.
3. transitive verb
4. transitive verb
5. transitive verb
When a feeling or an idea hits you, it suddenly affects you or comes into your mind.
6. transitive verb
If you hit a particular high or low point on a scale of something such as success or health,
you reach it.
[journalism]
7. countable noun
8. countable noun
9. countable noun
If someone who is searching for information on the internet gets a hit, they find a website where there is that information.
10.
See hit it off
12. to hit home
14. to hit the roof
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Video: pronunciation of
hit
Word Frequency
hit in American English
verb transitiveWord forms: hit or ˈhitting
1.
to come against, usually with force; strike
the car hit the tree
2.
to give a blow to; strike; knock
3.
to strike so as to deliver (a blow)
4.
to strike by throwing or shooting a missile at
to hit the target
5.
to cause to knock, bump, or strike, as in falling, moving, etc.
often with on or against to hit one's head on a door
7.
to come upon by accident or after search; find; light upon
to hit the right answer
9.
to go to; visit
we hit all the art galleries in town
10.
strike (sense 8) strike (sense 9) strike (sense 10) (variously)
11. US, Slang
to apply oneself to steadily or frequently
to hit the books
12. Slang
to demand or require of
with for; often with up she hit me up for a loan
13. US, Slang
to murder
said as of a hired murderer or an assassin14. Slang
to supply with a drug, etc.
15. US, Baseball
to get (a specified base hit)
to hit a double
16. US, Blackjack
to deal another card to
verb intransitive
17.
to give a blow or blows; strike
18.
to attack suddenly
19.
to knock, bump, or strike
usually with against20.
to come by accident or after search
with on or upon22. US, Baseball
to get a base hit
noun
23.
a blow that strikes its mark
24.
a collision of one thing with another
25.
an effectively witty or sarcastic remark
26.
a stroke of good fortune
28. Informal
31. Backgammon
Idioms:
Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
Derived forms
hitter (ˈhitter)
noun
Word origin
ME hitten < OE hittan < ON hitta, to hit upon, meet with < IE base *keid-, to fall > Welsh cwydd, a fall
Word Frequency
hit in British English
verbWord forms: hits, hitting or hit (mainly tr)
1. (also intr)
he hit the table with his fist
8.
to become suddenly apparent to (a person)
the reason for his behaviour hit me and made the whole episode clear
18. See hit it
19. See hit skins
20. See hit the sack
21. See not know what has hit one
noun
23.
a shot, blow, etc, that reaches its object
25. informal
b.
(as modifier)
a hit record
27. slang
a.
a murder carried out as the result of an underworld vendetta or rivalry
b.
(as modifier)
a hit squad
30. See make a hit with
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word origin
Old English hittan, from Old Norse hittaExamples of 'hit' in a sentence
hit
These examples have been automatically selected and may contain sensitive content. Read more…
Quotations
A hit, a very palpable hitHamlet
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hit
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hit
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In other languages
hit
British English: hit
/hɪt/ NOUN
A hit is the act of a moving object touching another object very quickly or hard.
...a hit on the head.
- American English: hit /ˈhɪt/
- Arabic: ضَرْبَة
- Brazilian Portuguese: batida colisão
- Chinese: 打击
- Croatian: pogodak
- Czech: náraz
- Danish: træffer
- Dutch: klap
- European Spanish: golpe impacto
- Finnish: isku
- French: coup
- German: Schlag
- Greek: χτύπημα
- Italian: successo
- Japanese: 衝突
- Korean: 타격
- Norwegian: støt slag
- Polish: uderzenie kolizja
- European Portuguese: batida
- Romanian: lovitură
- Russian: удар
- Spanish: golpe
- Swedish: succé
- Thai: การตี, แรงปะทะ, การชน
- Turkish: çarpma
- Ukrainian: удар
- Vietnamese: cú đánh
British English: hit
/hɪt/ VERB
If you hit something, you touch it with a lot of strength.
She hit the ball with the bat.
- American English: hit /ˈhɪt/
- Arabic: يُصِيبُ
- Brazilian Portuguese: bater
- Chinese: 打击
- Croatian: udariti
- Czech: udeřit
- Danish: ramme
- Dutch: slaan
- European Spanish: golpear
- Finnish: lyödä
- French: heurter
- German: schlagen
- Greek: χτυπώ
- Italian: colpire
- Japanese: 打つ
- Korean: (...을) 때리다 충돌
- Norwegian: slå
- Polish: uderzyć
- European Portuguese: bater
- Romanian: a lovi
- Russian: ударять
- Spanish: golpear
- Swedish: slå smälla till
- Thai: ตี
- Turkish: vurmak
- Ukrainian: бити
- Vietnamese: đánh
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hit
Related terms of
hit
Source
Definition of hit from the Collins English Dictionary
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