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  1. Dictionary
    hammer
    /ˈhamə/

    noun

    • 1. a tool with a heavy metal head mounted at right angles at the end of a handle, used for jobs such as breaking things and driving in nails.
    • 2. a metal ball of about 7 kg attached to a wire for throwing in an athletic contest.

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Jul 6, 2015 · When you use "hammer" as a transitive verb, it can mean attack, and usually doesn't mean drunk: That will hammer him. She hammered him. They had hammered him. Sometimes it can be ambiguous, without more context: He had been hammered. He got hammered.

  3. Apr 18, 2017 · 0. "hammered that home" can have two different meanings. First there is the expression that the nail that sticks up is the one that gets hammered. So if the nail is pounded in, then it conforms with the norm and doesn't stick out. So "My parents caught me sneaking in late and hammered home that I must be on time in the future."

  4. Jun 27, 2016 · to complete a task successfully or get something right. Example. A: Oh, you didn't burn the cake this time. B: Yep, nailed it! Nail down can have a similar meaning. nail down. : to make (something, such as a victory) certain to happen. <They need to score another touchdown to nail down the victory.>. : to find out or identify (something) exactly.

  5. 1. Both I do! and Me! are grammatically (and idiomatically) correct. Personal pronouns are by default accusative when they stand alone. The difference is in formality: the first reply would be considered neutral, while the second is markedly informal (in my opinion as a non-native speaker of English). – user3395.

  6. Aug 30, 2019 · 0. Has seen means that the event (seeing) started and ended at least once before now. This statement compares the past to the present. The event happened at Time A, it is now Time B and we are talking about the present (Time B). Had seen means that the event (seeing) started and ended in the past at least once before a second, more recent, time ...

  7. Apr 3, 2020 · 17. "Mercy me!" is an old-fashioned expression meaning "God have mercy on me!" and would be used in a situation where the speaker feels alarmed or afraid, or even mildly agitated. You could use "God help me!" or, if you dislike religious oaths, some other exclamation such as "Oh my!". Share.

  8. In short, I be very unlikely to insert the exact phrase "hammer, meet nail" into a conversation, even while talking about someone who was about to get a raw deal. But, particularly in the context of a musical, the phrase doesn't strike me as being off in any way.

  9. Apr 23, 2015 · You did miss all the LETTERs written using more than one CHARACTERs, I have two of them in my own name, and even if some languages that use combination of CHARACTERs to represent some SOUNDs don't handle them as LETTERs and cover it up saying it's pronunciation, I'm pretty sure my language is not the only one (speaking only of latin text of course) that has these combination specifically included in it's alphabet as distinct LETTERs.

  10. Sep 3, 2019 · 3. To "beat on" something means to pound or hammer on it. I haven't heard this particular usage before, but "hammering" is often synonymous with hard work. "Hammer away at" is an idiom that means to keep at something continuously. Will is basically saying that you need to continually work at your chosen craft to become good at it.

  11. Oct 21, 2015 · 4. The only reasonable usage of "four dozens of X" in British English would be if the items X were packaged in groups of 12, and this is a shorthand for "four packages, each containing one dozen Xs". That was certainly used in old business accounts, etc, e.g. books.google.co.uk/…. – alephzero.