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DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
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WordNet (r) 2.0
Elements database 20001107
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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9 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
hit
/ˈhɪt/
打擊,打,沖撞,諷刺(vt.)打,打擊,碰撞,打中,襲擊,偶然碰上(vi.)打,打中
From:
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
hit
命中
From:
Network Terminology
hit
擊中 命中
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hit
pron.
It
. [
Obs
.]
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hit
,
3d
pers
.
sing
. pres.
of
Hide
,
contracted
from
hideth
. [
Obs
.]
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hit
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Hit
;
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Hitting
.]
1.
To
reach
with
a
stroke
or
blow
;
to
strike
or
touch
,
usually
with
force
;
especially
,
to
reach
or
touch
(
an
object
aimed
at
).
I
think
you
have
hit
the
mark
.
--
Shak
.
2.
To
reach
or
attain
exactly
;
to
meet
according
to
the
occasion
;
to
perform
successfully
;
to
attain
to
;
to
accord
with
;
to
be
conformable
to
;
to
suit
.
Birds
learning
tunes
,
and
their
endeavors
to
hit
the
notes
right
.
--
Locke
.
There
you
hit
him
; . . .
that
argument
never
fails
with
him
.
--
Dryden
.
Whose
saintly
visage
is
too
bright
To
hit
the
sense
of
human
sight
. --
Milton
.
He
scarcely
hit
my
humor
.
--
Tennyson
.
3.
To
guess
;
to
light
upon
or
discover
.
“Thou
hast
hit
it.”
4.
Backgammon
To
take
up
,
or
replace
by
a
piece
belonging
to
the
opposing
player
; --
said
of
a
single
unprotected
piece
on
a
point
.
To hit off
,
to
describe
with
quick
characteristic
strokes
;
as
,
to
hit
off
a
speaker
. --
Sir
W
.
Temple
.
To hit out
,
to
perform
by
good
luck
. [
Obs
.] --
Spenser
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hit
v. i.
1.
To
meet
or
come
in
contact
;
to
strike
;
to
clash
; --
followed
by
against
or
on
.
If
bodies
be
extension
alone
,
how
can
they
move
and
hit
one
against
another?
--
Locke
.
Corpuscles
,
meeting
with
or
hitting
on
those
bodies
,
become
conjoined
with
them
.
--
Woodward
.
2.
To
meet
or
reach
what
was
aimed
at
or
desired
;
to
succeed
, --
often
with
implied
chance
,
or
luck
.
And
oft
it
hits
Where
hope
is
coldest
and
despair
most
fits
. --
Shak
.
And
millions
miss
for
one
that
hits
.
--
Swift
.
To hit on
or
To hit upon
,
to
light
upon
;
to
come
to
by
chance
;
to
discover
unexpectedly
;
as
,
he
hit on
the
solution
after
days
of
trying
.
“None
of
them
hit
upon
the
art.”
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Hit
,
n.
1.
A
striking
against
;
the
collision
of
one
body
against
another
;
the
stroke
that
touches
anything
.
So
he
the
famed
Cilician
fencer
praised
,
And
,
at
each
hit
,
with
wonder
seems
amazed
. --
Dryden
.
2.
A
stroke
of
success
in
an
enterprise
,
as
by
a
fortunate
chance
;
as
,
he
made
a
hit
;
esp
.
A
performance
,
as
a
musical
recording
,
movie
,
or
play
,
which
achieved
great
popularity
or
acclaim
;
also
used
of
books
or
objects
of
commerce
which
become
big
sellers
;
as
,
the
new
notebook
computer
was
a
big
hit
with
business
travellers
.
What
late
he
called
a
blessing
,
now
was
wit
,
And
God's
good
providence
,
a
lucky
hit
. --
Pope
.
3.
A
peculiarly
apt
expression
or
turn
of
thought
;
a
phrase
which
hits
the
mark
;
as
,
a
happy
hit
.
4.
A
game
won
at
backgammon
after
the
adversary
has
removed
some
of
his
men
.
It
counts
less
than
a
gammon
.
5.
Baseball
A
striking
of
the
ball
;
as
,
a
safe
hit
;
a
foul
hit
; --
sometimes
used
specifically
for
a
base hit
.
Base hit
,
Safe hit
,
Sacrifice hit
.
Baseball
See
under
Base
,
Safe
,
etc
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
hit
n
1: (
baseball
)
a
successful
stroke
in
an
athletic
contest
(
especially
in
baseball
); "
he
came
all
the
way
around
on
Williams
'
hit
"
2:
the
act
of
contacting
one
thing
with
another
; "
repeated
hitting
raised
a
large
bruise
"; "
after
three
misses
she
finally
got
a
hit
" [
syn
:
hitting
,
striking
]
3:
a
conspicuous
success
; "
that
song
was
his
first
hit
and
marked
the
beginning
of
his
career
"; "
that
new
Broadway
show
is
a
real
smasher
"; "
the
party
went
with
a
bang
"
[
syn
:
smash
,
smasher
,
strike
,
bang
]
4: (
physics
)
an
brief
event
in
which
two
or
more
bodies
come
together
; "
the
collision
of
the
particles
resulted
in
an
exchange
of
energy
and
a
change
of
direction
" [
syn
:
collision
]
5:
a
dose
of
a
narcotic
drug
6:
a
murder
carried
out
by
an
underworld
syndicate
; "
it
has
all
the
earmarks
of
a
Mafia
hit
"
7:
a
connection
made
via
the
internet
to
another
website
;
"
WordNet
gets
many
hits
from
users
worldwide
"
v
1:
cause
to
move
by
striking
; "
hit
a
ball
"
2:
hit
against
;
come
into
sudden
contact
with
; "
The
car
hit
a
tree
"; "
He
struck
the
table
with
his
elbow
" [
syn
:
strike
,
impinge on
,
run into
,
collide with
] [
ant
:
miss
]
3:
affect
or
afflict
suddenly
,
usually
adversely
; "
We
were
hit
by
really
bad
weather
"; "
He
was
stricken
with
cancer
when
he
was
still
a
teenager
"; "
The
earthquake
struck
at
midnight
" [
syn
:
strike
]
4:
deal
a
blow
to
,
either
with
the
hand
or
with
an
instrument
;
"
He
hit
her
hard
in
the
face
"
5:
reach
a
destination
,
either
real
or
abstract
; "
We
hit
Detroit
by
noon
"; "
The
water
reached
the
doorstep
"; "
We
barely
made
it
to
the
finish
line
"; "
I
have
to
hit
the
MAC
machine
before
the
weekend
starts
" [
syn
:
reach
,
make
,
attain
,
arrive at
,
gain
]
6:
reach
a
point
in
time
,
or
a
certain
state
or
level
; "
The
thermometer
hit
100
degrees
"; "
This
car
can
reach
a
speed
of
140
miles
per
hour
" [
syn
:
reach
,
attain
]
7:
hit
with
a
missile
from
a
weapon
[
syn
:
shoot
,
pip
]
8:
cause
to
experience
suddenly
; "
Panic
struck
me
"; "
An
interesting
idea
hit
her
"; "
A
thought
came
to
me
"; "
The
thought
struck
terror
in
our
minds
"; "
They
were
struck
with
fear
" [
syn
:
strike
,
come to
]
9:
make
a
strategic
,
offensive
,
assault
against
an
enemy
,
opponent
,
or
a
target
; "
The
Germans
struck
Poland
on
Sept
.
1, 1939"; "
We
must
strike
the
enemy's
oil
fields
"; "
in
the
fifth
inning
,
the
Giants
struck
,
sending
three
runners
home
to
win
the
game
5
to
2" [
syn
:
strike
]
10:
hit
the
intended
target
or
goal
11:
produce
by
manipulating
keys
or
strings
of
musical
instruments
,
also
metaphorically
; "
The
pianist
strikes
a
middle
C
"; "
strike
`
z
'
on
the
keyboard
"; "
her
comments
struck
a
sour
note
" [
syn
:
strike
]
12:
encounter
by
chance
; "
I
stumbled
across
a
long-lost
cousin
last
night
in
a
restaurant
" [
syn
:
stumble
]
13:
gain
points
in
a
game
; "
The
home
team
scored
many
times
";
"
He
hit
a
home
run
"; "
He
hit
.300
in
the
past
season
"
[
syn
:
score
,
tally
,
rack up
]
14:
consume
to
excess
; "
hit
the
bottle
"
15:
kill
intentionally
and
with
premeditation
; "
The
mafia
boss
ordered
his
enemies
murdered
" [
syn
:
murder
,
slay
,
dispatch
,
bump off
,
polish off
,
remove
]
16:
drive
something
violently
into
a
location
; "
he
hit
his
fist
on
the
table
"; "
she
struck
her
head
on
the
low
ceiling
"
[
syn
:
strike
]
17:
pay
unsolicited
and
usually
unwanted
sexual
attention
to
;
"
He
tries
to
hit
on
women
in
bars
"
[
also
:
hitting
]
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