bat
1 Americannoun
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Sports.
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the wooden club used in certain games, as baseball and cricket, to strike the ball.
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a racket, especially one used in badminton or table tennis.
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a whip used by a jockey.
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the act of using a club or racket in a game.
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the right or turn to use a club or racket.
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a heavy stick, club, or cudgel.
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Informal. a blow, as with a bat.
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any fragment of brick or hardened clay.
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Masonry. a brick cut transversely so as to leave one end whole.
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British Slang. speed; rate of motion or progress, especially the pace of the stroke or step of a race.
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Slang. a spree; binge.
to go on a bat.
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Ceramics.
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a sheet of gelatin or glue used in bat printing.
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a slab of moist clay.
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a ledge or shelf in a kiln.
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a slab of plaster for holding a piece being modeled or for absorbing excess water from slip.
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batt.
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
verb phrase
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bat around
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bat in to cause (a run) to be scored by getting a hit.
He batted in two runs with a double to left.
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bat out to do, write, produce, etc., hurriedly.
I have to bat out a term paper before class.
noun
idioms
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blind as a bat, nearly or completely blind; having very poor vision.
Anyone can tell that he's blind as a bat, but he won't wear glasses.
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have bats in one's belfry, to have crazy ideas; be very peculiar, erratic, or foolish.
If you think you can row across the ocean in that boat, you have bats in your belfry.
verb (used with object)
idioms
abbreviation
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battalion.
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battery.
noun
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any of various types of club with a handle, used to hit the ball in certain sports, such as cricket, baseball, or table tennis
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a flat round club with a short handle, resembling a table-tennis bat, used by a man on the ground to guide the pilot of an aircraft when taxiing
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cricket short for batsman
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any stout stick, esp a wooden one
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informal a blow from such a stick
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a small board used for tossing the coins in the game of two-up
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slang a drinking spree; binge
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slang speed; rate; pace
they went at a fair bat
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another word for batting
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cricket (of an opening batsman) to reach the end of an innings without being dismissed
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of one's own accord; without being prompted by someone else
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by one's own unaided efforts
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informal immediately; without hesitation
verb
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(tr) to strike with or as if with a bat
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(intr) sport (of a player or a team) to take a turn at batting
noun
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any placental mammal of the order Chiroptera , being a nocturnal mouselike animal flying with a pair of membranous wings (patagia). The group is divided into the Megachiroptera ( fruit bats ) and Microchiroptera ( insectivorous bats )
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slang an irritating or eccentric woman (esp in the phrase old bat )
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having extremely poor eyesight
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informal to be mad or eccentric; have strange ideas
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slang very quickly
verb
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to wink or flutter (one's eyelids)
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informal to show no surprise or concern
Other Word Forms
- batlike adjective
Etymology
Origin of bat1
First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English noun bat, bot, batte, Old English batt, perhaps from Celtic; compare Irish, Scots Gaelic bat, bata “staff, cudgel”; Middle English verb batten, partly from the noun, partly from Old French batre; batter 1
Origin of bat2
First recorded in 1570–75; apparently from Scandinavian; compare dialectal Swedish natt-batta, variant of Old Swedish natt-bakka “night-bat”; replacing Middle English bakke, bak (from Scandinavian), Middle English balke for unrecorded blake, from Scandinavian; compare dialectal Swedish natt-blacka, Old Icelandic ledhr-blaka “bat,” equivalent to ledhr “skin, leather” + blaka “flutter”
Origin of bat3
An Americanism dating back to 1835–40, extended sense of earlier “flutter like a hawk” first recorded in 1605–15; variant of bate 2
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
“Equipped with a prosthesis simulating a glass eye over his pupil,” we are told, Mr. Day-Lewis “practiced hitting it with the tip of his knife without batting an eyelid.”
And then I read it, and right off the bat, my character has the first three lines, all in caps, in a hospital room.
From Los Angeles Times
“You really had to go to bat to keep open a case that was more than two years old.”
From Salon
“I got to play shortstop the whole year, batted third. It helped me build a foundation. I started to grow, get stronger and become more comfortable.”
From Los Angeles Times
Just last week he’d ushered five souls into the Afterlife: two rabbits and an elk to Pleasure, an old songbird to Progress, and a fruit bat to Peace.
From Literature
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.