| 释义 | 
		  hit /hit/     transitive verb (hittˈing; hit)- To strike
 - To reach with a blow or missile (also figurative)
 - To come into forceful contact with
 - To knock (eg oneself, one's head)
 - To inflict (a blow)
 - To drive by a stroke
 - To move onto (a road), reach (a place)
 - To go to (a place) to enjoy oneself, as in hit the town (informal)
 - (of news) to be published in (informal)
 - To come, by effort or chance, luckily (upon)
 - To suit (with) (obsolete)
 - To imitate exactly
 - To suit, fit or conform to
 - To hurt, affect painfully (figurative)
 - To make a request or demand of (N Am inf)
 - To murder (slang)
      intransitive verb- To strike
 - To make a movement of striking
 - To come in contact
 - To arrive suddenly and destructively
 - (of an internal combustion engine) to ignite the air and fuel mixture in the cylinders
 - To inject a dose of a hard drug (slang)
       noun- An act or occasion of striking
 - A successful stroke or shot
 - A lucky chance
 - A surprising success
 - An effective remark, eg a sarcasm, witticism
 - Something that pleases the public or an audience
 - A stroke that allows the batter to reach at least first base safely (baseball)
 - At backgammon, a move that throws one of the opponent's men back to the entering point, or a game won after one or two men are removed from the board
 - A murder by a gang of criminals (slang)
 - A dose of a hard drug (slang)
 - An instance of a computer file, esp a website, being contacted
     ORIGIN: OE hyttan, appar ON hitta to light on, to find; Swed hitta to find, Dan hitte to hit upon   hittˈer  noun    hitˈ-and-missˈ  adjective - Hitting or missing, according to circumstances
 - Random
    hitˈ-and-runˈ  adjective - (eg of an air-raid) lasting only a very short time
 - (of a driver) causing injury and driving off without reporting the incident
 - (of an accident) caused by a hit-and-run driver
     noun  Such an event or accident  hit list  noun (slang) -  A list of people to be killed by gangsters or terrorists
 - Any list of targeted victims
   hitˈman  noun (informal) Someone employed to kill or attack others (also figurative)  hitˈ-or-missˈ  adjective  Hit-and-miss  hit parade  noun - A list of currently popular songs (old)
 - A list of the most popular things of any kind (figurative)
    hit squad  noun (slang) A group of assassins working together  hittˈy-missˈy  adjective  Random, haphazard    a hit or a miss  A case in which either success or complete failure is possible  hard hit  Gravely affected by some trouble, or by love  hit a blot  - In backgammon, to capture an exposed man
 - To find a weak place
    hit at  To aim a blow, sarcasm, gibe, etc at  hit back  To retaliate  hit below the belt see under belt  hit it  To find, often by chance, the right answer  hit it off  To agree, be compatible and friendly (sometimes with with)  hit it up (slang) To inject a drug  hit off  To imitate or describe aptly (someone or something)  hit on or upon - To come upon, discover, devise
 - To single out
 - To make sexual advances to, flirt with (informal)
    hit out  - To strike out, esp with the fist
 - To attack strongly (absolute or with at)
    hit the bottle (slang) To drink excessively  hit the ceiling or roof  To be seized with or express violent anger  hit the ground running (informal) To react instantly, functioning at full speed and efficiency immediately   hit the hay or sack (slang) To go to bed  hit the high spots see under high1  hit the nail on the head see under nail  hit the road (slang) To leave, go away  hit the sack see hit the hay above.  hit wicket  The act, or an instance, of striking the wicket with the bat or part of the body and dislodging the bails, and thus being out (cricket)  make or score a hit with - To become popular with
 - To make a good impression on
      |