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beat
[ beet ]
verb (used with object)
- to strike violently or forcefully and repeatedly:
Before there were vacuum cleaners, you had to hang rugs on a line and beat them with a stick to get the dust out.
Synonyms: flog, buffet, cudgel, pommel, baste, maul, drub, batter, belabor
- to dash against:
We could hear the rain beating the trees outside the window.
- to flutter, flap, or rotate in or against:
The hummingbird beat the air with its wings.
- to overcome in a contest; defeat:
They beat us by 12 points.
- to win over in a race (used with to ):
I'll beat you to the corner!
- to be superior to:
Making reservations beats waiting in line.
- Informal. to be incomprehensible to; baffle:
It beats me how he got the job.
- to mitigate or offset the effects of:
One way to beat the hot weather is to go swimming.
We beat the interest rate hike by consolidating our debt into a line of credit.
- to sound, such as on a drum:
She beat a steady rhythm on the bongos.
- to stir vigorously:
Beat the egg whites well.
- to break, forge, or make by blows:
The blacksmith beat the red-hot iron into a horseshoe.
- to produce (an attitude, idea, habit, etc.) by repeated efforts:
He made his piano student practice scales one hour a day in the hopes it would beat some discipline into him.
- to make (a path) by repeated walking:
Kids had beaten a path through the woods to the river.
- to strike (a person or animal) repeatedly and injuriously:
Some of the hoodlums beat their victims viciously before robbing them.
- Music. to mark (time) by strokes, such as with the hand or foot or with a metronome:
She beat time to the music with her foot.
- Hunting. to scour (the forest, grass, or brush), and sometimes make noise, in order to rouse game.
- Slang. to swindle; cheat (often followed by out ):
He beat him out of hundreds of dollars on that deal.
- to escape or avoid (blame or punishment).
- Textiles. to strike (the loose pick) into its proper place in the woven cloth by beating the loosely deposited filling yarn with the reed.
verb (used without object)
- to strike repeated blows; pound:
She kept beating on my door, so I finally opened it.
- to throb or pulsate:
His heart began to beat faster.
- to dash; strike (usually followed by against or on ):
The sound of hail beating on the roof was deafening.
- to make a sound when struck:
We could hear drums beating in the distance.
- to play, such as on a drum:
I began beating softly on the drums, picking up the rhythm as they sang.
- to achieve victory in a contest; win:
Which team do you think will beat?
- to scour cover for game.
- Physics. to make a beat ( def 39 ) or beats.
- (of a cooking ingredient) to foam or stiffen as a result of beating or whipping:
This cream won't beat.
- Nautical. to tack to windward by sailing close-hauled.
noun
- a stroke or blow:
A beat on the head with that thing could kill you.
- the sound made by one or more blows:
The beat of drums was coming from the school’s music room.
- a throb or pulsation:
The patient had a pulse of 60 beats per minute.
- the ticking sound made by a clock or watch escapement.
- one's assigned or regular path or habitual round:
The police officer was familiar with all the businesses on her beat.
- Journalism.
- the reporting of a piece of news in advance, especially before it is reported by a rival or rivals: Compare exclusive ( def 13 ), scoop ( def 9 ).
Getting the beat on that story was my lucky break as a reporter.
- Music.
- the audible, visual, or mental marking of the metrical divisions of music:
In 4/4 time, there are four beats to the bar.
- a stroke of the hand, baton, etc., marking the time division or an accent for music during performance:
Watch the conductor carefully so you can come in on his first beat.
- Theater. a momentary time unit imagined by an actor in timing actions:
Wait four beats and then pick up the phone.
- Prosody. the accent stress, or ictus, in a foot or rhythmical unit of poetry.
- Physics. a pulsation caused by the coincidence of the amplitudes of two oscillations of unequal frequencies, having a frequency equal to the difference between the frequencies of the two oscillations.
- a subdivision of a county, such as in Mississippi.
- Often Beat. Informal. beatnik ( def ).
adjective
- Informal. exhausted; worn out:
After all that gardening I was too beat to do anything but lie on the sofa.
- Often Beat. relating to or characteristic of members of the Beat Generation or beatniks:
Jack Kerouac was a Beat poet.
verb phrase
- Informal. to defeat; win or be chosen over:
We beat out the competition for that contract.
- Baseball. (of a hitter) to make (an infield ground ball or bunt) into a hit:
He beat out a weak grounder to third.
- to produce hurriedly, especially by writing or typing:
There are three days left to beat out the first draft of the novel.
- Carpentry. to cut (a mortise).
- to ward off; repulse:
We had to beat off clouds of mosquitoes.
- Slang: Vulgar. to masturbate.
- to force back; compel to withdraw:
They beat back the attackers.
- to search through; scour:
After beating about for several hours, he turned up the missing papers.
- Nautical. to tack into the wind.
- Also beat up on. to strike repeatedly so as to cause painful injury:
Two bullies beat him up on the way home from school.
In the third round the champion really began to beat up on the challenger.
- British Informal. to find or gather; scare up:
I'll beat up some lunch for us while you make out the shopping list.
beat
/ biːt /
verb
- whenintr, often foll by against, on, etc to strike with or as if with a series of violent blows; dash or pound repeatedly (against)
- tr to punish by striking; flog
- to move or cause to move up and down; flap
the bird beat its wings heavily
- intr to throb rhythmically; pulsate
her heart beat fast
- tr to make (one's way) by or as if by blows
she beat her way out of the crowd
- trsometimes foll byup cookery to stir or whisk (an ingredient or mixture) vigorously
- trsometimes foll byout to shape, make thin, or flatten (a piece of metal) by repeated blows
- tr music to indicate (time) by the motion of one's hand, baton, etc, or by the action of a metronome
- whentr, sometimes foll by out to produce (a sound or signal) by or as if by striking a drum
- to sound or cause to sound, by or as if by beating
beat the drums!
- to overcome (an opponent) in a contest, battle, etc
- tr; often foll by back, down, off etc to drive, push, or thrust
- tr to arrive or finish before (someone or something); anticipate or forestall
they set off early to beat the rush hour
- tr to form (a path or track) by repeatedly walking or riding over it
- to scour (woodlands, coverts, or undergrowth) so as to rouse game for shooting
- slang.tr to puzzle or baffle
it beats me how he can do that
- intr physics (of sounds or electrical signals) to combine and produce a pulsating sound or signal
- intr nautical to steer a sailing vessel as close as possible to the direction from which the wind is blowing
- slang.tr to cheat or defraud
he beat his brother out of the inheritance
- beat about the bushto avoid the point at issue; prevaricate
- beat a retreatto withdraw or depart in haste
- beat it slang.often imperative to go away
- beat one's breastSee breast
- beat someone's brains out slang.to kill by knocking severely about the head
- beat someone to it informal.to reach a place or achieve an objective before someone else
- beat the bounds(formerly) to define the boundaries of a parish by making a procession around them and hitting the ground with rods
- can you beat it? or can you beat that? slang.an expression of utter amazement or surprise
noun
- a stroke or blow
- the sound made by a stroke or blow
- a regular sound or stroke; throb
- an assigned or habitual round or route, as of a policeman or sentry
- ( as modifier )
beat police officers
- the basic rhythmic unit in a piece of music, usually grouped in twos, threes, or fours
- pop or rock music characterized by a heavy rhythmic beat
- ( as modifier )
a beat group
- physics the low regular frequency produced by combining two sounds or electrical signals that have similar frequencies
- horology the impulse given to the balance wheel by the action of the escapement
- prosody the accent, stress, or ictus in a metrical foot
- nautical a course that steers a sailing vessel as close as possible to the direction from which the wind is blowing
- the act of scouring for game by beating
- the organized scouring of a particular woodland so as to rouse the game in it
- the woodland where game is so roused
- short for beatnik
- fencing a sharp tap with one's blade on an opponent's blade to deflect it
- modifier, often capital of, characterized by, or relating to the Beat Generation
a beat poet
beat philosophy
adjective
- slang.postpositive totally exhausted
beat
/ bēt /
- A fluctuation or pulsation, usually repeated, in the amplitude of a signal. Beats are generally produced by the superposition of two waves of different frequencies; if the signals are audible, this results in fluctuations between louder and quieter sound.
Derived Forms
- ˈbeatable, adjective
Other Words From
- beat·a·ble adjective
- o·ver·beat verb overbeat overbeaten or overbeat overbeating
- un·der·beat noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of beat1
Word History and Origins
Origin of beat1
Idioms and Phrases
- beat a retreat, to withdraw or retreat, especially hurriedly or in disgrace.
- beat all, Informal. to surpass anything of a similar nature, especially in an astonishing or outrageous way:
The way he came in here and ordered us around beats all!
- beat it, Informal. to depart; go away:
He was pestering me, so I told him to beat it.
- beat the rap, Slang. to succeed in evading the penalty for a crime; be acquitted.
- beat the air / wind, to make repeated futile attempts.
- beat around / about the bush, to avoid coming to the point; delay in approaching a subject directly.
- off one's beat, outside of one's routine, general knowledge, or range of experience:
He protested that abstract art was off his beat.
- on the beat, in the correct rhythm or tempo:
By the end of the number they were all finally playing on the beat.
More idioms and phrases containing beat
- dead beat
- heart misses a beat
- if you can't beat them, join them
- march to a different beat
- miss a beat
- off the beaten track
- pound the pavement (a beat)
- to beat the band
Synonym Study
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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