- (baseball) a successful stroke in an athletic contest (especially in baseball); "he came all the way around on Williams' hit"
- cause to move by striking; "hit a ball"
- the act of contacting one thing with another; "repeated hitting raised a large bruise"; "after three misses she finally got a hit"
- hit against; come into sudden contact with; "The car hit a tree"; "He struck the table with his elbow"
- a conspicuous success; "that song was his first hit and marked the beginning of his career"; "that new Broadway show is a real smasher"; "the party went with a bang"
- deal a blow to, either with the hand or with an instrument; "He hit her hard in the face"
- HiT Entertainment is a British-American entertainment distribution company established in 1989, and originally the international distribution arm of Jim Henson Productions called Henson International Television. ...
- Hit! is a 1973 action film directed by Sidney J. Furie and starring Billy Dee Williams and Richard Pryor. It is about a federal agent trying to destroy a drug zone after his daughter dies from a heroin overdose.
- Hīt or Heet (هيت) is a city in al-Anbar province, Iraq. Hīt lies northwest of Ramadi, the provincial capital, in the Sunni Triangle.
- Hit is a 2003 compilation album of songs by British musician Peter Gabriel. It reached #29 in the UK album charts and #100 in the US. Disc one is labelled "Hit" and disc two "Miss", reflecting the first disc's containing several of Gabriel's biggest-selling singles.
- In baseball statistics, a hit (denoted by H), also called a base hit, is credited to a batter when the batter safely reaches first base after hitting the ball into fair territory, without the benefit of an error or a fielder's choice.
- Hīt is a district in Al Anbar Governorate, Iraq. It is centred around the city of Hīt, this district It has between 400,000 and 500,000 inhabitants.
- A blow; a punch; A success, especially in the entertainment industry; An attack on a location, person or people; (Internet) The result(s) of a search of a computer system or, for example, the entire Internet using a search engine; A measured visit to a web site, a request for a single file ...
- (Hits) This generally means ALL requests from a webserver including requests by a web browser for html pages, jpeg's, gif's and other images. Hits is a phrase often thrown around but is generally not very meaningful in quantitfying search engine traffic.
- (Hits) When a reporter goes live from a location, they usually have anywhere from two to four “hits”—these are two- to four-minute segments. ...
- (Hits) The number of times a particular web page is viewed. The number of hits is independent of whether or not it is the same user visiting the same page more than once. Sometimes also referred to as visits.
- (Hits) The number of times a web object (page or picture) has been viewed or downloaded. (See also Page Hits).
- (Hits) Number of downloads of every element of a web page, rather than the page as a whole. A page of 20 images, text boxes, logos and menus will count as 20 hits, so hits are therefore not regarded as a reliable measurement of web traffic.
- (Hits) The individual requests a server answers to download a Web page. There’s been debate as to the validity of ‘the number of hits’ pages or sites are said to receive. ...
- (Hits) A term used to describe a match of a search term.
- (Hits) represent the total number of requests made to the server during the given time period (month, day, hour etc..).
- (Hits) A request for a file on a webserver. Most often these can be graphic files and documents.
- (Hits) Refers to the number of files that are downloaded from a Web server. Keeping track of hits is a way of measuring traffic to a website. Because a typical website contains hundreds or even thousands of files, the number of hits a site receives is much greater than the number of actual visitors.
- (Hits) This is the retrieval of any data from a web page. If you were to call up a web page with 10 graphics on it, this would actually register as 11 hits. This counts as 11 because one hit is counted for the actual page and 10 hits for each graphic that appears on the page. ...
- (3 Hits) Takes 3 direct hits to bring down the duck.