Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
Giulia Capaldi
To hit / to strike / to bash / to clobber -> is there a difference?
28 déc. 2019 20:55
Réponses · 8
2
Ciao, buongiorno, Giulia! :) Just saying hi because I am learning Italian right now!
All of these are somewhat similar, but there are some slight differences. The best way is to illustrate with some examples. In terms of a physical attack, it is similar, i.e. - "He hit his enemy in the face, he struck his enemy in the face, etc."
But (1) bash and clobber sometimes are stronger than to hit or to strike. To say: "He got clobbered during that fight" means that he was hit many times and suffered serious injuries. So it is more than just one or two hits or one or two strikes.
Some other differences:
(2) You can strike a match, which means to light a match on fire. But to say "I hit the match" or "I bashed that match" doesn't make sense.
(3) You can bash someone verbally online, i.e. - to write an angry email insulting someone. However, to hit or to strike someone online doesn't make any sense.
28 décembre 2019
1
I think Ken is correct. (see his answer in the comments section).
"Clobber' is also used figuratively to mean 'defeat" -- used when one sports team wins BIG over another.
Team A had 10 points. Team B had 0 points.
Team A clobbered Team B.
28 décembre 2019
As a native English (UK) speaker but not a teacher.... I would say "to hit and to strike" are a standard ways to refer to physical attacks on someone or something ...to bash and clobber are in my opinion more of a "street" way of expressing physical attacks ..that assuming you wish to use them in that way
they all can be used in various ways depending upon the sentence/ phrase in which they are used ..
28 décembre 2019
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Giulia Capaldi
Compétences linguistiques
Arabe, Anglais, Français, Allemand, Italien, Espagnol
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Allemand, Espagnol
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