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1 definition found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Strike
v. i.
To
move
;
to
advance
;
to
proceed
;
to
take
a
course
;
as
,
to
strike
into
the
fields
.
A
mouse
. . .
struck
forth
sternly
[bodily].
--
Piers
Plowman
.
2.
To
deliver
a
quick
blow
or
thrust
;
to
give
blows
.
And
fiercely
took
his
trenchant
blade
in
hand
,
With
which
he
stroke
so
furious
and
so
fell
. --
Spenser
.
Strike
now
,
or
else
the
iron
cools
.
--
Shak
.
3.
To
hit
;
to
collide
;
to
dush
;
to
clash
;
as
,
a
hammer
strikes
against
the
bell
of
a
clock
.
4.
To
sound
by
percussion
,
with
blows
,
or
as
with
blows
;
to
be
struck
;
as
,
the
clock
strikes
.
A
deep
sound
strikes
like
a
rising
knell
.
--
Byron
.
5.
To
make
an
attack
;
to
aim
a
blow
.
A
puny
subject
strikes
At
thy
great
glory
. --
Shak
.
Struck
for
throne
,
and
striking
found
his
doom
.
--
Tennyson
.
6.
To
touch
;
to
act
by
appulse
.
Hinder
light
but
from
striking
on
it
[
porphyry
],
and
its
colors
vanish
.
--
Locke
.
7.
To
run
upon
a
rock
or
bank
;
to
be
stranded
;
as
,
the
ship
struck
in
the
night
.
8.
To
pass
with
a
quick
or
strong
effect
;
to
dart
;
to
penetrate
.
Till
a
dart
strike
through
his
liver
.
--
Prov
.
vii
. 23.
Now
and
then
a
glittering
beam
of
wit
or
passion
strikes
through
the
obscurity
of
the
poem
.
--
Dryden
.
9.
To
break
forth
;
to
commence
suddenly
; --
with
into
;
as
,
to
strike
into
reputation
;
to
strike
into
a
run
.
10.
To
lower
a
flag
,
or
colors
,
in
token
of
respect
,
or
to
signify
a
surrender
of
a
ship
to
an
enemy
.
That
the
English
ships
of
war
should
not
strike
in
the
Danish
seas
.
--
Bp
.
Burnet
.
11.
To
quit
work
in
order
to
compel
an
increase
,
or
prevent
a
reduction
,
of
wages
.
12.
To
become
attached
to
something
; --
said
of
the
spat
of
oysters
.
13.
To
steal
money
. [
Old
Slang
,
Eng
.]
To strike at
,
to
aim
a
blow
at
.
To strike for
,
to
start
suddenly
on
a
course
for
.
To strike home
,
to
give
a
blow
which
reaches
its
object
,
to
strike
with
effect
.
To strike in
.
(a)
To
enter
suddenly
.
(b)
To
disappear
from
the
surface
,
with
internal
effects
,
as
an
eruptive
disease
.
(c)
To
come
in
suddenly
;
to
interpose
;
to
interrupt
.
“I
proposed
the
embassy
of
Constantinople
for
Mr
.
Henshaw
,
but
my
Lord
Winchelsea
struck
in
.”
--
Evelyn
.
(d)
To
join
in
after
another
has
begun,as
in
singing
.
To strike in with
,
to
conform
to
;
to
suit
itself
to
;
to
side
with
,
to
join
with
at
once
.
“To
assert
this
is
to
strike
in
with
the
known
enemies
of
God's
grace.”
--
South
.
To strike out
.
(a)
To
start
;
to
wander
;
to
make
a
sudden
excursion
;
as
,
to strike out
into
an
irregular
course
of
life
.
(b)
To
strike
with
full
force
.
(c)
Baseball
To
be
put
out
for
not
hitting
the
ball
during
one's
turn
at
the
bat
.
To strike up
,
to
commence
to
play
as
a
musician
;
to
begin
to
sound
,
as
an
instrument
.
“Whilst
any
trump
did
sound
,
or
drum
struck
up
.”
--
Shak
.
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