- hit
- {{11}}hit (n.) late 15c., "a rebuke;" 1590s as "a blow," from HIT (Cf. hit) (v.). Meaning "successful play, song, person," etc., 1811, is from the verbal sense of "to hit the mark, succeed" (c.1400). Underworld slang meaning "a killing" is from 1970. Meaning "dose of narcotic" is 1951, from phrases such as hit the bottle.{{12}}hit (v.) late O.E. hyttan, hittan "come upon, meet with, fall in with, 'hit' upon," from a Scandinavian source, Cf. O.N. hitta "to light upon, meet with," also "to hit, strike;" Swed. hitta "to find," Dan., Norw. hitte "to hit, find," from P.Gmc. *hitjanan. Related: Hitting. Meaning shifted in late O.E. period to "strike," via "to reach with a blow or missile," and replaced O.E. slean in this sense. Original sense survives in phrases such as hit it off (1780, earlier in same sense hit it, 1630s) and is revived in hit on (1970s).Underworld slang meaning "to kill by plan" is 1955 (as a noun in this sense from 1970). To hit the bottle "drink alcohol" is from 1889. To hit the nail on the head (1570s) is from archery. Hit the road "leave" is from 1873; to hit (someone) up "request something" is from 1917. Hit and run is 1899 as a baseball play, 1924 as a driver failing to stop at a crash he caused. To not know what hit (one) is from 1923.
Etymology dictionary. 2014.