| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
deck (dɛk) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | nautical any of various platforms built into a vessel: a promenade deck; the poop deck |
| 2. | a similar floor or platform, as in a bus |
| 3. | a. the horizontal platform that supports the turntable and pick-up of a record player |
| b. See tape deck | |
| 4. | chiefly (US) a pack of playing cards |
| 5. | obsolete computing Also called: pack a collection of punched cards relevant to a particular program |
| 6. | a raised wooden platform built in a garden to provide a seating area |
| 7. | informal clear the decks to prepare for action, as by removing obstacles from a field of activity or combat |
| 8. | informal hit the deck |
| a. to fall to the floor or ground, esp in order to avoid injury | |
| b. to prepare for action | |
| c. to get out of bed | |
| —vb | |
| 9. | ( |
| 10. | to build a deck on (a vessel) |
| 11. | slang to knock (a person) to the floor or ground |
| [C15: from Middle Dutch dec a covering; related to | |
| 'decker | |
| —n | |
deck definition
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hit the deck definition
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hit the deck
Also, hit the dirt. Fall to the ground, usually for protection. For example, As the planes approached, we hit the deck, or We heard shooting and hit the dirt. In the early 1900s the first expression was nautical slang for "jump out of bed," or "wake up," and somewhat later, "get going." The current meaning dates from the 1920s.