Hit the Books: to prepare for classes by reading and doing all your assigned homework
It means to study - you're "hitting" as in coming into contact with, or impacting, your books; you're opening them and reading.
Means to study HARD before a test or exam
Palestinian and Persian
food
Meaning he will help you out.
It is just an idiom and has no history.
Origin: Unless you can fly, something must be in contact with the road when moving on it - the rubber on the tires, the soles of the shoes, the hooves of the horse. So, when you start out on a journey overland, you are hitting the road.
"Hit the books" is a sentence.
More than likely, this idiom comes from archery and shooting. Being good with guns and projectile weapons is referred to as having "good marksmanship." So it means you hit what you aim to hit. So as an idiom, if you say something exactly as intended and your audience understands it the way you meant it, and you strike something your audience believes to be true, then you hit your mark.
To be exposed
Advertising
Origin "up a storm"
No
"Hit the books" is an informal idiom that means to study intensively or to begin studying diligently. It implies focusing on one's academic studies or putting in dedicated effort towards learning.
The idiom "twelvemonth" comes from Old English, where it referred to a period of twelve months or a year. Over time, it evolved into a more formal or poetic way of saying "year."
The idiom "to brain someone" is thought to have originated from the idea of using one's brain as a weapon to strike or hurt someone. It is a figurative expression that means to hit or strike someone on the head with great force.
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affrica (iraq
To hope for the best