verb, beat, beat⋅en or beat, beat⋅ing, noun, adjective | 1. | to strike violently or forcefully and repeatedly. |
| 2. | to dash against: rain beating the trees. |
| 3. | to flutter, flap, or rotate in or against: beating the air with its wings. |
| 4. | to sound, as on a drum: beating a steady rhythm; to beat a tattoo. |
| 5. | to stir vigorously: Beat the egg whites well. |
| 6. | to break, forge, or make by blows: to beat their swords into plowshares. |
| 7. | to produce (an attitude, idea, habit, etc.) by repeated efforts: I'll beat some sense into him. |
| 8. | to make (a path) by repeated treading. |
| 9. | to strike (a person or animal) repeatedly and injuriously: Some of the hoodlums beat their victims viciously before robbing them. |
| 10. | Music. to mark (time) by strokes, as with the hand or a metronome. |
| 11. | Hunting. to scour (the forest, grass, or brush), and sometimes make noise, in order to rouse game. |
| 12. | to overcome in a contest; defeat. |
| 13. | to win over in a race: We beat the English challenger to Bermuda. |
| 14. | to be superior to: Making reservations beats waiting in line. |
| 15. | to be incomprehensible to; baffle: It beats me how he got the job. |
| 16. | to defeat or frustrate (a person), as a problem to be solved: It beats me how to get her to understand. |
| 17. | to mitigate or offset the effects of: beating the hot weather; trying to beat the sudden decrease in land values. |
| 18. | Slang. to swindle; cheat (often fol. by out): He beat him out of hundreds of dollars on that deal. |
| 19. | to escape or avoid (blame or punishment). |
| 20. | Textiles. to strike (the loose pick) into its proper place in the woven cloth by beating the loosely deposited filling yarn with the reed. |
| 21. | to strike repeated blows; pound. |
| 22. | to throb or pulsate: His heart began to beat faster. |
| 23. | to dash; strike (usually fol. by against or on): rain beating against the windows. |
| 24. | to resound under blows, as a drum. |
| 25. | to achieve victory in a contest; win: Which team do you think will beat? |
| 26. | to play, as on a drum. |
| 27. | to scour cover for game. |
| 28. | Physics. to make a beat or beats. |
| 29. | (of a cooking ingredient) to foam or stiffen as a result of beating or whipping: This cream won't beat. |
| 30. | Nautical. to tack to windward by sailing close-hauled. |
| 31. | a stroke or blow. |
| 32. | the sound made by one or more such blows: the beat of drums. |
| 33. | a throb or pulsation: a pulse of 60 beats per minute. |
| 34. | the ticking sound made by a clock or watch escapement. |
| 35. | one's assigned or regular path or habitual round: a policeman's beat. |
| 36. | Music.
|
| 37. | Theater. a momentary time unit imagined by an actor in timing actions: Wait four beats and then pick up the phone. |
| 38. | Prosody. the accent stress, or ictus, in a foot or rhythmical unit of poetry. |
| 39. | 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. |
| 40. | Journalism.
|
| 41. | a subdivision of a county, as in Mississippi. |
| 42. | (often initial capital letter ) Informal. beatnik. |
| 43. | Informal. exhausted; worn out. |
| 44. | (often initial capital letter ) of or characteristic of members of the Beat Generation or beatniks. |
| 45. | beat about,
|
| 46. | beat back, to force back; compel to withdraw: to beat back an attacker. |
| 47. | beat down,
|
| 48. | beat off,
|
| 49. | beat out,
|
| 50. | beat up,
|
| 51. | beat all, Informal. to surpass anything of a similar nature, esp. in an astonishing or outrageous way: The way he came in here and ordered us around beats all! |
| 52. | beat a retreat. retreat (def. 12). |
| 53. | beat around or about the bush. bush 1 (def. 17). |
| 54. | beat it, Informal. to depart; go away: He was pestering me, so I told him to beat it. |
| 55. | beat the air or wind, to make repeated futile attempts. |
| 56. | beat the rap. rap 1 (def. 16). |
| 57. | off one's beat, outside of one's routine, general knowledge, or range of experience: He protested that nonobjective art was off his beat. |
| 58. | on the beat, in the correct rhythm or tempo: By the end of the number they were all finally playing on the beat. |

beat (bēt) v. beat, beat·en (bēt'n) or beat, beat·ing, beats v. tr.
beat off
Idiom(s): beat allTo be impressive or amazing. Often used in negative conditional constructions: If that doesn't beat all! Idiom(s): beat a retreatTo make a hasty withdrawal. Idiom(s): beat around/about the bushTo fail to confront a subject directly. Idiom(s): beat it Slang To leave hurriedly. Idiom(s): beat the bushesTo make an exhaustive search. Idiom(s): beat the drum/drumsTo give enthusiastic public support or promotion: a politician who beats the drum for liberalism. Idiom(s): beat up on
Idiom(s): to beat the bandTo an extreme degree. [Middle English beten, from Old English bēaten; see bhau- in Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: These verbs mean to hit heavily and repeatedly with violent blows: was mugged and beaten; basted him with a stick; was battered in the boxing ring; rioting students belabored by police officers; buffeted him with her open palm; hammered the opponent with his fists; lambasted every challenger; troops pounded with mortar fire; pummeled the bully soundly; thrashed the thief for stealing the candy. See Also Synonyms at defeat. |
beat (bēt)
v. beat, beat·en (bēt'n), beat·ing, beats
To strike repeatedly.
To pulsate; throb.
| beat (bēt) Pronunciation Key
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. |
beat it
Go away, as in We should beat it before the food's all gone. This term is rude when used as an imperative, as in Stop pestering me
beat it! [Slang; late 1800s]