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    hit
    /hit/

    verb

    • 1. bring one's hand or a tool or weapon into contact with (someone or something) quickly and forcefully: "the woman hit the mugger with her umbrella" Similar strikeslapsmackcuff
    • 2. (of a missile or a person aiming one) strike (a target): "the sniper fired and hit a third man"

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. : an act or instance of striking or forcefully coming in contact with someone or something : an act or instance of hitting or being hit penalized for an illegal hit from behind The bunker took a direct hit from the bombers.

  3. to move your hand or an object onto the surface of something so that it touches it, usually with force: Teachers are not allowed to hit their pupils. This type of glass won't shatter no matter how hard you hit it. hit something with something She hit her thumb with the hammer.

  4. A boxer can hit a punching bag, and you can slip and hit your head on a chair. Other kinds of hits include bombs, bullets, or missiles striking targets; assassins or "hitmen" killing someone for pay; and reaching a certain goal, like when you hit a high note or your income hits six figures.

  5. Hit definition: to deal a blow or stroke to. See examples of HIT used in a sentence.

  6. Definition of hit verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. A hit is the act of a moving object touching another object very quickly or hard.

  8. HIT definition: 1. to touch something quickly and with force using your hand or an object in your hand: 2. to…. Learn more.

  9. an occasion when something that has been thrown, fired, etc. at an object reaches that object; the fact of being hit by something. We finished the first round with a score of two hits and six misses. One of the tanks took a direct hit. The aircraft suffered seven hits in the raid.

  10. 1. To come into contact with forcefully; strike: The car hit the guardrail. 2. a. To cause to come into contact: She hit her hand against the wall. b. To deal a blow to: He hit the punching bag. c. To cause an implement or missile to come forcefully into contact with: hit the nail with a hammer. 3.

  11. hit. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English hit1 /hɪt/ S1 W2 verb (past tense and past participle hit, present participle hitting) 1 touch somebody/something hard [ transitive] to touch someone or something quickly and hard with your hand, a stick etc He raised the hammer and hit the bell. hit somebody/something with something The ...

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