hit

[hit] /hɪt/
verb (used with object), hit, hitting.
1.
to deal a blow or stroke to:
Hit the nail with the hammer.
2.
to come against with an impact or collision, as a missile, a flying fragment, a falling body, or the like:
The car hit the tree.
3.
to reach with a missile, a weapon, a blow, or the like, as one throwing, shooting, or striking:
Did the bullet hit him?
4.
to succeed in striking:
With his final shot he hit the mark.
5.
Baseball.
  1. to make (a base hit):
    He hit a single and a home run.
  2. bat1 (def 14).
6.
to drive or propel by a stroke:
to hit a ball onto the green.
7.
to have a marked effect or influence on; affect severely:
We were all hit by the change in management.
8.
to assail effectively and sharply (often followed by out):
The speech hits out at warmongering.
9.
to request or demand of:
He hit me for a loan.
10.
to reach or attain (a specified level or amount):
Prices are expected to hit a new low. The new train can hit 100 mph.
11.
to be published in or released to; appear in:
When will this report hit the papers? What will happen when the story hits the front page?
12.
to land on or arrive in:
The troops hit the beach at 0800. When does Harry hit town?
13.
to give (someone) another playing card, drink, portion, etc.:
If the dealer hits me with an ace, I'll win the hand. Bartender, hit me again.
14.
to come or light upon; meet with; find:
to hit the right road.
15.
to agree with; suit exactly:
I'm sure this purple shirt will hit Alfred's fancy.
16.
to solve or guess correctly; come upon the right answer or solution:
You've hit it!
17.
to succeed in representing or producing exactly:
to hit a likeness in a portrait.
18.
Informal. to begin to travel on:
Let's hit the road. What time shall we hit the trail?
verb (used without object), hit, hitting.
19.
to strike with a missile, a weapon, or the like; deal a blow or blows:
The armies hit at dawn.
20.
to come into collision (often followed by against, on, or upon):
The door hit against the wall.
21.
Slang. to kill; murder.
22.
(of an internal-combustion engine) to ignite a mixture of air and fuel as intended:
This jalopy is hitting on all cylinders.
23.
to come or light (usually followed by upon or on):
to hit on a new way.
noun
24.
an impact or collision, as of one thing against another.
25.
a stroke that reaches an object; blow.
26.
a stroke of satire, censure, etc.:
a hit at complacency.
27.
Baseball. base hit.
28.
Backgammon.
  1. a game won by a player after the opponent has thrown off one or more men from the board.
  2. any winning game.
29.
a successful stroke, performance, or production; success:
The play is a hit.
30.
Slang. a dose of a narcotic drug.
31.
Digital Technology.
  1. (in information retrieval) an instance of successfully locating an item of data, as in a database or on the Internet:
    When I search for my name, I get lots of hits.
  2. an instance of accessing a website.
32.
Slang. a killing, murder, or assassination, especially one carried out by criminal prearrangements.
Verb phrases
33.
hit off,
  1. to represent or describe precisely or aptly:
    In his new book he hits off the American temperament with amazing insight.
  2. to imitate, especially in order to satirize.
34.
hit on, Slang. to make persistent sexual advances to:
guys who hit on girls at social events.
35.
hit out,
  1. to deal a blow aimlessly:
    a child hitting out in anger and frustration.
  2. to make a violent verbal attack:
    Critics hit out at the administration's new energy policy.
36.
hit up, Slang.
  1. to ask to borrow money from:
    He hit me up for ten bucks.
  2. to inject a narcotic drug into a vein.
Idioms
37.
hit it off, Informal. to be congenial or compatible; get along; agree:
We hit it off immediately with the new neighbors. She and her brother had never really hit it off.
38.
hit or miss, without concern for correctness or detail; haphazardly:
The paint job had been done hit or miss.
39.
hit the books, Slang. to study hard; cram.
40.
hit the bottle, Slang. bottle (def 4).
41.
hit the high spots,
  1. to go out on the town; go nightclubbing:
    We'll hit the high spots when you come to town.
  2. to do something in a quick or casual manner, paying attention to only the most important or obvious facets or items:
    When I clean the house I hit the high spots and that's about all. This course will hit the high spots of ancient history.
Origin
before 1100; 1865-70, Americanism for def 5a; Middle English hitten, Old English hittan; perhaps < Scandinavian; compare Old Norse hitta to come upon (by chance), meet with
Related forms
hitless, adjective
hittable, adjective
hitter, noun
nonhit, noun
outhit, verb (used with object), outhit, outhitting.
self-hitting, adjective
unhit, adjective
unhittable, adjective
well-hit, adjective
Synonyms
1. See strike, beat. 25, 27, 29. See blow1 .
Examples from the web for hit
  • During its initial release the song spent several weeks atop the your hit parade charts.
  • Monogram continued to experiment with series some hit and some missed.
  • The show was a worldwide hit, like sesame street and the muppet show.
  • In the games it appears in it the strongest sword, and sometimes cast holy on hit.
  • Mckinley was hit in the breastbone and stomach eight days later, he died.
  • Is fatalistic about his cancer and wants to do the hit, which devastates his son.
  • Running is discouraged, and in some groups results in everyone getting to hit the runner.
  • The number of kicks is determined beforehand, as in two hit kill using two hits.
  • The person who fails to hit the required number is eliminated.
  • It turned out that one of the bullets had hit him in the spine.
British Dictionary definitions for hit

hit

/hɪt/
verb (mainly transitive) hits, hitting, hit
1.
(also intransitive) to deal (a blow or stroke) to (a person or thing); strike: the man hit the child
2.
to come into violent contact with: the car hit the tree
3.
to reach or strike with a missile, thrown object, etc: to hit a target
4.
to make or cause to make forceful contact; knock or bump: I hit my arm on the table
5.
to propel or cause to move by striking: to hit a ball
6.
(cricket) to score (runs)
7.
to affect (a person, place, or thing) suddenly or adversely: his illness hit his wife very hard
8.
to become suddenly apparent to (a person): the reason for his behaviour hit me and made the whole episode clear
9.
to achieve or reach: to hit the jackpot, unemployment hit a new high
10.
to experience or encounter: I've hit a slight snag here
11.
(slang) to murder (a rival criminal) in fulfilment of an underworld contract or vendetta
12.
to accord or suit (esp in the phrase hit one's fancy)
13.
to guess correctly or find out by accident: you have hit the answer
14.
(informal) to set out on (a road, path, etc): let's hit the road
15.
(informal) to arrive or appear in: he will hit town tomorrow night
16.
(informal, mainly US & Canadian) to demand or request from: he hit me for a pound
17.
(slang) to drink an excessive amount of (alcohol): to hit the bottle
18.
(music, slang) hit it, start playing
19.
(US, slang) hit skins, to have sexual intercourse
20.
(slang) hit the sack, hit the hay, to go to bed
21.
not know what has hit one, to be completely taken by surprise
noun
22.
an impact or collision
23.
a shot, blow, etc, that reaches its object
24.
an apt, witty, or telling remark
25.
(informal)
  1. a person or thing that gains wide appeal: she's a hit with everyone
  2. (as modifier): a hit record
26.
(informal) a stroke of luck
27.
(slang)
  1. a murder carried out as the result of an underworld vendetta or rivalry
  2. (as modifier): a hit squad
28.
(slang) a drag on a cigarette, a swig from a bottle, a line of a drug, or an injection of heroin
29.
(computing) a single visit to a website
30.
(informal) make a hit with, score a hit with, to make a favourable impression on
See also hit off, hit on, hit out
Word Origin
Old English hittan, from Old Norse hitta
Word Origin and History for hit
v.

late Old English hyttan, hittan "come upon, meet with, fall in with, 'hit' upon," from a Scandinavian source, cf. Old Norse hitta "to light upon, meet with," also "to hit, strike;" Swedish hitta "to find," Danish and Norwegian hitte "to hit, find," from Proto-Germanic *hitjanan. Related: Hitting. Meaning shifted in late Old English period to "strike," via "to reach with a blow or missile," and replaced Old English slean in this sense. Original sense survives in phrases such as hit it off (1780, earlier in same sense hit it, 1630s) and is revived in hit on (1970s).

Underworld slang meaning "to kill by plan" is 1955 (as a noun in this sense from 1970). To hit the bottle "drink alcohol" is from 1889. To hit the nail on the head (1570s) is from archery. Hit the road "leave" is from 1873; to hit (someone) up "request something" is from 1917. Hit and run is 1899 as a baseball play, 1924 as a driver failing to stop at a crash he caused. To not know what hit (one) is from 1923.

n.

late 15c., "a rebuke;" 1590s as "a blow," from hit (v.). Meaning "successful play, song, person," etc., 1811, is from the verbal sense of "to hit the mark, succeed" (c.1400). Underworld slang meaning "a killing" is from 1970. Meaning "dose of narcotic" is 1951, from phrases such as hit the bottle.

Slang definitions & phrases for hit

hit

modifier

: a hit musical/ a hit song

noun
  1. Anything very successful and popular, esp a show, book, etc: He wrote two Broadway hits (1815+)
  2. A stroke of good fortune at gambling, on the stock market, etc; lucky break: a big hit on the commodities exchange (1666+)
  3. A premeditated murder or organized-crime execution, esp one contracted for with a professional killer: ''He can order a hit,'' a police officer says/ There is no set price for a hit (1970+ Underworld)
  4. A stroke of severe criticism; attack; assault: the club hired the firm to counter the hits it was taking in the media/ Zavala took a double hit because her husband also refused to cross the picket line (1668+)
  5. A dose, inhalation, etc, of narcotics; fix •Hit the pipe, ''smoke opium,'' is found by 1886: The current price of cocaine was about $10 a ''hit''/ He held a long hit in his mouth, then expelled it slowly (1951+ Narcotics)
  6. A drink; swallow; snort: a tall glass of thick, slightly green fluid, and said, ''Take a big hit off this, Felix'' (1950s+)
  7. A pleasurable sensation; rush: People jockeyed for position around the foyer to get a little hit of darshan (1960s+ Narcotics)
  8. A cigarette into which heroin has been introduced: GIs sit smoking the mixed tobacco-and-heroin cigarettes called ''hits'' (1960s+ Narcotics)
  9. A dilution or ''cutting'' of a narcotic: You give it a full hit, you already double your price (1970s+ Narcotics)
  10. Each separate occasion; each time; pop, shot: You should be on a tour, where you can get 2,000 people a hit (1980s+)
  11. An unwanted, unwarranted, hospital admission: The ambulance people asked which hospital would take the hit (1980s+ Medical)
  12. A match between a search item and an item in a database: That year, Popcorn racked up 58 Nexis hits (1990s+ Computer)
  13. An interpretation; idea; take: My hit on this is he heard about Brian (1990s+)
verb
  1. : I think this show will hit
  2. : She hit real big at the track last week
  3. rub out, whack: The mob figure got hit last night in his car (1955+)
  4. To reach; visit; attain: His new book hit the best-seller list/ The market hit a new high today (1888+)
  5. To pass an examination, esp with a good grade; ace: I really hit the eco final (1950s+ Students)
  6. To cause a strong reaction; have a strong impact: The injection hit the heart like a runaway locomotive (1891+)
Related Terms

banjo hit, make a hit, pinch hit, smash


hit in Technology

1. cache hit.
2. A request to a web server from a web browser or other client (e.g. a robot).
The number of hits on a server may be important for determining advertising revenue.
In the course of loading a single web page, a browser may hit a web server many times e.g. to retrieve the page itself and each image on the page. In contrast, caching by browsers and web proxies reduces the number of hits on the server because some requests are satisfied from the cache.
3. To press and release a key on the keyboard. Some prefer the less aggressive "tap".
(2000-02-20)
Idioms and Phrases with hit