a tool consisting of a solid head, usually of metal, set crosswise on a handle, used for beating metals, driving nails, etc.
any of various instruments or devices resembling this in form, action, or use, as a gavel, a mallet for playing the xylophone, or a lever that strikes the bell in a doorbell.
Firearms. the part of a lock that by its fall or action causes the discharge, as by exploding the percussion cap or striking the primer or firing pin; the cock.
one of the padded levers by which the strings of a piano are struck.
Track. a metal ball, usually weighing 16 pounds (7.3 kilograms), attached to a steel wire at the end of which is a grip, for throwing for distance in the hammer throw.
Anatomy. the malleus.
verb (used with object)
to beat or drive (a nail, peg, etc.) with a hammer.
to fasten by using hammer and nails; nail (often followed by down, up, etc.): We spent the day hammering up announcements on fences and trees.
to assemble or build with a hammer and nails (often followed by together): He hammered together a small crate.
to shape or ornament (metal or a metal object) by controlled and repeated blows of a hammer; beat out: to hammer brass; to hammer a brass bowl.
to form, construct, or make with or as if with a hammer; build by repeated, vigorous, or strenuous effort (often followed by out or together): to hammer out an agreement; to hammer together a plot.
to produce with or by force (often followed by out): to hammer out a tune on the piano; to hammer a home run.
to pound or hit forcefully: to hammer someone in the jaw.
to settle (a strong disagreement, argument, etc.); bring to an end, as by strenuous or repeated effort (usually followed byout): They hammered out their differences over a glass of beer.
to present (points in an argument, an idea, etc.) forcefully or compellingly; state strongly, aggressively, and effectively (often followed by home).
to impress (something) as if by hammer blows: You'll have to hammer the rules into his head.
British.
(in the London stock exchange) to dismiss (a person) from membership because of default.
to depress the price of (a stock).
verb (used without object)
to strike blows with or as if with a hammer.
to make persistent or laborious attempts to finish or perfect something (sometimes followed by away): He hammered away at his speech for days.
to reiterate; emphasize by repetition (often followed by away): The teacher hammered away at the multiplication tables.
Idioms for hammer
under the hammer, for sale at public auction: The old estate and all its furnishings went under the hammer.
Origin of hammer
First recorded before 1000; Middle English hamer, Old English hamor; cognate with German Hammer “hammer,” Old Norse hamarr “hammer, crag”; originally, a stone weapon; probably akin to Russian kámen' “stone”
SYNONYMS FOR hammer
12, 13 knock, bang.
13 strike.
14 resolve, solve, thrash out, work out.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR hammer ON THESAURUS.COM
OTHER WORDS FROM hammer
ham·mer·a·ble,adjectiveham·mer·er,nounham·mer·like,adjectiveouthammer,verb (used with object)
re·ham·mer,verb (used with object)un·der·ham·mer,noun
It can’t be used as a hammer against a new pathogen like the coronavirus which we’re still trying to understand.
The myth—and danger—of COVID herd immunity|Sy Mukherjee|October 14, 2020|Fortune
On these days all it takes is a spark from a downed power line, or a hammer hitting a metal stake.
New Maps Show How Climate Change is Making California’s “Fire Weather” Worse|by Al Shaw and Elizabeth Weil|October 14, 2020|ProPublica
Using a hammer against American firms would damage that image.
Butterfly Effect: Can Xi Avoid Trump’s Trap?|Charu Kasturi|August 27, 2020|Ozy
Next, the GOP should hammer away at how our roads, bridges, and tunnels are crumbling, and push for an infrastructure initiative.
Bush, Christie, Romney: Who’ll Be the GOP Class Warrior?|Lloyd Green|December 15, 2014|DAILY BEAST
If we enter with hammer in hand, we may leave with merely dust and rubble on our faces.
For Rent: Priceless Historic Sites|Elinor Betesh|November 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
In this way, certain cognitive mechanisms can act like a hammer too eager for nails.
Why Are Millennials Unfriending Organized Religion?|Vlad Chituc|November 9, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The phrase means, “the nail that sticks out always gets hit by a hammer.”
Sor Juana: Mexico’s Most Erotic Poet and Its Most Dangerous Nun|Katie Baker|November 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Another surveillance video, showing the perpetrator with hammer in hand, is here.
Is Brooklyn Becoming Unsafe for Gays? It Depends On Which Ones|Jay Michaelson|October 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Hephaistos, the god of fire, is figured with a hammer and in the form of a lame and ugly blacksmith.
History Of Ancient Civilization|Charles Seignobos
The wedge point may not strike back at the hammer that drives it.
The Last Shot|Frederick Palmer
Helplessly the boy spun the cylinder and snapped the hammer again and again, but to no purpose.
Twenty-Four Unusual Stories for Boys and Girls|Anna Cogswell Tyler
"It's loaded," said Terry, slightly raising the hammer and noticing the powder in the pan.
The Hunters of the Ozark|Edward S. Ellis
The hammer was soon brought, but the paper was only found after a long search.
Debit and Credit|Gustav Freytag
British Dictionary definitions for hammer
hammer
/ (ˈhæmə) /
noun
a hand tool consisting of a heavy usually steel head held transversely on the end of a handle, used for driving in nails, beating metal, etc
any tool or device with a similar function, such as the moving part of a door knocker, the striking head on a bell, etc
a power-driven striking tool, esp one used in forging. A pneumatic hammer delivers a repeated blow from a pneumatic ram, a drop hammer uses the energy of a falling weight
a part of a gunlock that rotates about a fulcrum to strike the primer or percussion cap, either directly or via a firing pin
athletics
a heavy metal ball attached to a flexible wire: thrown in competitions
the event or sport of throwing the hammer
an auctioneer's gavel
a device on a piano that is made to strike a string or group of strings causing them to vibrate
anatomy the nontechnical name for malleus
curlingthe last stone thrown in an end
go under the hammerorcome under the hammerto be offered for sale by an auctioneer
hammer and tongswith great effort or energyfighting hammer and tongs
on someone's hammerAustralian and NZslang
persistently demanding and critical of someone
in hot pursuit of someone
verb
to strike or beat (a nail, wood, etc) with or as if with a hammer
(tr)to shape or fashion with or as if with a hammer
(tr; foll by in or into)to impress or force (facts, ideas, etc) into (someone) through constant repetition
(intr)to feel or sound like hammeringhis pulse was hammering
(intr often foll by away) to work at constantly
(tr)British
to question in a relentless manner
to criticize severely
informalto inflict a defeat on
(tr)slangto beat, punish, or chastise
(tr)stock exchange
to announce the default of (a member)
to cause prices of (securities, the market, etc) to fall by bearish selling
See also hammer out
Derived forms of hammer
hammerer, nounhammer-like, adjective
Word Origin for hammer
Old English hamor; related to Old Norse hamarr crag, Old High German hamar hammer, Old Slavonic kamy stone