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Batter   /bˈætər/   Listen
verb
Batter  v. t.  (past & past part. battered; pres. part. battering)  
1.
To beat with successive blows; to beat repeatedly and with violence, so as to bruise, shatter, or demolish; as, to batter a wall or rampart.
2.
To wear or impair as if by beating or by hard usage. "Each battered jade."
3.
(Metallurgy) To flatten (metal) by hammering, so as to compress it inwardly and spread it outwardly.



Batter  v. i.  (Arch.) To slope gently backward.



noun
Batter  n.  
1.
A semi-liquid mixture of several ingredients, as, flour, eggs, milk, etc., beaten together and used in cookery.
2.
Paste of clay or loam.
3.
(Printing) A bruise on the face of a plate or of type in the form.



Batter  n.  A backward slope in the face of a wall or of a bank; receding slope.
Batter rule, an instrument consisting of a rule or frame, and a plumb line, by which the batter or slope of a wall is regulated in building.



Batter  n.  The one who wields the bat in baseball; the one whose turn it is at bat; formerly called the batsman.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Batter" Quotes from Famous Books



... this very place, on the sand and the shingle dry, He lay, with his batter'd face upturned to the frowning sky. When your waters wash'd and swill'd high over his drowning head, When his nostrils and lungs were filled, when his feet and hands were as lead, When against the rock he was hurl'd, ...
— Poems • Adam Lindsay Gordon

... great sigh he rose, yawned cavernously and shivered. Better get to bed and to sleep:—a bed that didn't clank and jolt and batter your brains to a pulp. Things would look amazingly ...
— Far to Seek - A Romance of England and India • Maud Diver

... cupboard, all cut up so that it looked as if it might be chicken, and put it in the dish with other things, and then she tucked them all under a thick crust, and set it down in a tin oven before the fire to bake. And that was not all. She got out some more cornmeal, and made a batter, and put in some sugar and something else which she slipped in from a bowl, and which looked in the batter something like raisins; and at the last moment Willie brought her a cup of snow and she hastily beat it into the cake, or pudding, whichever ...
— The Children's Book of Christmas Stories • Various

... demoralizing tendency in a direction which we should now, perhaps, consider innocuous. Certainly the Jeremiad overdid it, and like a swift, but not straight bowler at cricket, he sent balls which no wicket-keeper could stop, and which, therefore, were harmless to the batter. He did not want boldness. He attacked Dryden, now close upon his grave: Congreve, a young man; Vanbrugh, Cibber, Farquhar, and the rest, all alive, all in the zenith of their fame, and all as popular as writers could be. It was as much as if a man should stand up to-day and denounce Dickens ...
— The Wits and Beaux of Society - Volume 1 • Grace Wharton and Philip Wharton

... it from the inside. Then when they apply it to the wall, they draw back the beam which I have just mentioned by turning a certain mechanism, and then they let it swing forward with great force against the wall. And this beam by frequent blows is able quite easily to batter down and tear open a wall wherever it strikes, and it is for this reason that the engine has the name it bears, because the striking end of the beam, projecting as it does, is accustomed to butt against whatever it may ...
— Procopius - History of the Wars, Books V. and VI. • Procopius


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