English » Slovenian

I . hit [hɪt] N

1. hit (blow):

hit
udarec m

3. hit (success):

hit
hit
hit m
to be a [big] hit with sb

4. hit (in baseball):

hit
udarec m

5. hit sl (of drug):

hit
šus m

6. hit esp Am inf (murder):

hit
umor m
hit

7. hit INET:

hit

8. hit COMPUT (in database):

hit
to take a [big] hit

II . hit <-tt-, hit, hit> [hɪt] VB trans

2. hit (come in contact):

hit
zadevati [perf zadeti]

3. hit (press):

hit

5. hit (with missile):

6. hit SPORTS:

hit

7. hit (affect negatively):

9. hit inf (go to):

11. hit (occur to):

12. hit (produce):

III . hit [hɪt] VB intr

1. hit (strike):

to hit [at sb/sth]

2. hit (attack):

3. hit (take effect):

hit

hit off VB trans to hit it off [with sb] inf

hit on VB intr

1. hit (think of):

hit

2. hit Am sl (make sexual advances):

3. hit Am inf (attempt to extract [money]):

hit out VB intr to hit out [at sb]

hit up VB trans Am inf

hit upon VB intr

hit idea:

hit

di·rect ˈhit N

ˈhit man N

smash ˈhit N

I . hit-and-ˈrun N no pl

II . hit-and-ˈrun ADJ

hit-and-run driver:

hit-or-ˈmiss ADJ

hit-or-miss → hit-and-miss:

See also hit-and-miss

Usage examples with hitting

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
He sometimes charges them by hitting a punching bag, but says that it doesn't charge them fully.
en.wikipedia.org
The term slapstick refers to a doubled, or tricked, hitting stick that makes a loud sound upon (light) contact with another person.
en.wikipedia.org
But in focusing on these numbers we've skirted the main flaw in the government's heavy-hitting lines.
theconversation.com
He attacks her, hitting her in the head with a spanner and leaving her to die.
en.wikipedia.org
An all-time low patronage of 22,000 struck in 1928, before the numbers started increasing, hitting 33,000 in 1930.
en.wikipedia.org
Jones ramped up the paper's already liberal views with hard-hitting, provocative editorials that attacked big business and brooked no compromise.
en.wikipedia.org
Hitting the 7 and 9 would light up a bumper, earning 10 points instead of the usual 1.
en.wikipedia.org
Exhaustion of glycogen is a major cause of what marathon runners call hitting the wall.
en.wikipedia.org
He started hitting her teeth with the pliers.
en.wikipedia.org
It is hitting the resonant frequency of a champagne glass that - allegedly - allows a soprano to shatter it when she hits her top note.
www.bbc.co.uk

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