deck
[ dek ]
/ dɛk /
noun
adjective
Civil Engineering.
(of a bridge truss) having a deck or floor upon or above the structure.
Compare through(def 22).
verb (used with object)
Idioms for deck
Origin of deck
1425–75; (noun) late Middle English
dekke material for covering < Middle Dutch
dec covering, roof; (v.) < Dutch
dekken to cover; cognate with German
decken; cf.
thatch
OTHER WORDS FROM deck
un·decked, adjectiveWords nearby deck
British Dictionary definitions for hit the deck
deck
/ (dɛk) /
noun
verb (tr)
See also
deck over
Derived forms of deck
decker, nounWord Origin for deck
C15: from Middle Dutch
dec a covering; related to
thatch
Idioms and Phrases with hit the deck (1 of 2)
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.
Idioms and Phrases with hit the deck (2 of 2)
deck