Anglų - Lietuvių žodynas
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hit
 
              
            Hit tarimas:
- /hit/ 
Hit audio:
Žodžio paaiškinimas anglų kalba:
- verb-transitive: To come into contact with forcefully; strike:  The car hit the guardrail. 
- verb-transitive: To reach with or as if with a blow:  The bullet hit the police officer in the shoulder. 
- verb-transitive: To cause to come into contact:  She hit her hand against the wall. 
- verb-transitive: To deal a blow to.
- verb-transitive: To strike with a missile:  fired and hit the target. 
- verb-transitive: To press or push (a key or button, for example):  hit the return key by mistake. 
- verb-transitive: Sports   To reach with a propelled ball or puck:  hit the running back with a pass. 
- verb-transitive: Sports   To score in this way:  She hit the winning basket. 
- verb-transitive: Sports   To perform (a shot or maneuver) successfully:  couldn't hit the jump shot. 
- verb-transitive: Sports   To propel with a stroke or blow:  hit the ball onto the green. 
- verb-transitive: Baseball   To execute (a base hit) successfully:  hit a single. 
- verb-transitive: Baseball   To bat against (a pitcher or kind of pitch) successfully:  can't hit a slider. 
- verb-transitive: To affect, especially adversely:  The company was hit hard by the recession. Influenza hit the elderly the hardest. 
- verb-transitive: To be affected by (a negative development):  Their marriage hit a bad patch. 
- verb-transitive: Informal   To win (a prize, for example), especially in a lottery.
- verb-transitive: Informal   To arise suddenly in the mind of; occur to:  It finally hit him that she might be his long-lost sister. 
- verb-transitive: Informal   To go to or arrive at:  We hit the beach early. 
- verb-transitive: Informal   To attain or reach:  Monthly sales hit a new high. She hit 40 on her last birthday. 
- verb-transitive: To produce or represent accurately:  trying to hit the right note. 
- verb-transitive: Games   To deal cards to.
- verb-transitive: Sports   To bite on or take (bait or a lure). Used of a fish.
- verb-intransitive: To strike or deal a blow.
- verb-intransitive: To come into contact with something; collide.
- verb-intransitive: To attack:  The raiders hit at dawn. 
- verb-intransitive: To happen or occur:  The storm hit without warning. 
- verb-intransitive: To achieve or find something desired or sought:  finally hit on the answer; hit upon a solution to the problem. 
- verb-intransitive: Baseball   To bat or bat well:  Their slugger hasn't been hitting lately. 
- verb-intransitive: Sports   To score by shooting, especially in basketball:  hit on 7 of 8 shots. 
- verb-intransitive: To ignite a mixture of air and fuel in the cylinders. Used of an internal-combustion engine.
- noun: A collision or impact.
- noun: A successfully executed shot, blow, thrust, or throw.
- noun: Sports   A deliberate collision with an opponent, such as a body check in ice hockey.
- noun: A successful or popular venture:  a Broadway hit. 
- noun: Computer Science   A match of data in a search string against data that one is searching.
- noun: Computer Science   A connection made to a website over the Internet or another network:  Our company's website gets about 2,000 hits daily. 
- noun: An apt or effective remark.
- noun: Baseball   A base hit.
- noun: Slang   A dose of a narcotic drug.
- noun: Slang   A puff of a cigarette or a pipe.
- noun: Slang   A murder planned and carried out usually by a member of an underworld syndicate.
- phrasal-verb: hit on  Slang   To pay unsolicited and usually unwanted sexual attention to:  can't go into a bar lately without being hit on. 
- phrasal-verb: hit up  Slang   To approach and ask (someone) for something, especially for money:  tried to hit me up for a loan. 
- idiom: hit it big  Slang   To be successful:  investors who hit it big on the stock market. 
- idiom: hit it off  Informal   To get along well together.
- idiom: hit the books  Informal   To study, especially with concentrated effort.
- idiom: bottle  Slang   To engage in drinking alcoholic beverages.
- idiom: hit the bricks  Slang   To go on strike.
- idiom: hit the fan  Slang   To have serious, usually adverse consequences.
- idiom: hit the ground running  Informal   To begin a venture with great energy, involvement, and competence.
- idiom: hay  Slang   To go to bed:  hit the hay well before midnight. 
- idiom: points  To direct attention to the most important points or places.
- idiom: hit the jackpot  To become highly and unexpectedly successful, especially to win a great deal of money.
- idiom: hit the nail on the head  To be absolutely right.
- idiom: hit the road  Slang   To set out, as on a trip; leave.
- idiom: roof  Slang   To express anger, especially vehemently.
- idiom: hit the spot  To give total or desired satisfaction, as food or drink.
                
                
                Lietuviškos reikšmės:
- pataikyti į taikinį
- hit the right nail on the head tiksliai pataikyti
- atspėti
- hit somebody hard suteikti kam vargo
- tiksliai apibūdinti (žodžiu)
- to hit leg - sus
- (hit)
- to hit out kirsti smūgį
- pulti (ką nors)
- smogti
- kirsti
- sudoroti
