Yes because you are not literally hitting a sack.
Does it make sense if you translate it literally? If it does, it's not an idiom. Have you ever seen anyone actually hit a ceiling? No, so this must be an idiom.
hit the sack means to go to bed or to sleep.It means he has gone to bed - hitting the sack is a slang way of saying your body will hit the bed when you lie down.
"Hit the books."
You'll come back, you hear.
The homophone for "sack" is "sac."
I'm going to crash now. I'm going to hit the sack. I'm going to cop some Z's.
She got mad.
The origin of hit the hay means GO 2 SLEEP.(i thnk)
hit the hay, hit the sack, knock out, sack out.
the phrase hit the sack came from Germany.
It means that one company is secretly dealing with another one. The mental image is of two people having an affair.
hit the sack means to go to bed or to sleep.It means he has gone to bed - hitting the sack is a slang way of saying your body will hit the bed when you lie down.
Does it make sense if you translate it literally? If it does, it's not an idiom. Have you ever seen anyone actually hit a ceiling? No, so this must be an idiom.
time to hit the sack, or bed time.
Say he hit you
hit the sack means to go to bed or to sleep.It means he has gone to bed - hitting the sack is a slang way of saying your body will hit the bed when you lie down.
"Hit the books."