HIT vs CHANCE: NOUN
- A murder planned and carried out usually by a member of an underworld syndicate.
- A puff of a cigarette or a pipe.
- A base hit.
- An apt or effective remark.
- A connection made to a website over the Internet or another network.
- A match of data in a search string against data that one is searching.
- A successful or popular venture.
- A deliberate collision with an opponent, such as a body check in ice hockey.
- A successfully executed shot, blow, thrust, or throw.
- A collision or impact.
- (physics) an brief event in which two or more bodies come together
- A dose of a narcotic drug
- A murder carried out by an underworld syndicate
- A connection made via the internet to another website
- The act of contacting one thing with another
- A conspicuous success
- (baseball) a successful stroke in an athletic contest (especially in baseball)
- Random occurrence; luck.
- An opportunity or possibility.
- To take advantage of every circumstance; to seize every opportunity.
- That branch of mathematics which treats of the probability of the occurrence of particular events, as the fall of dice in given positions.
- The chief opportunity; that upon which reliance is had, esp. self-interest.
- The sole remaining ground of hope.
- One who comes unexpectedly.
- Probability.
- A possibility; a likelihood; an opportunity; -- with reference to a doubtful result.
- The supposed effect of such an agent; something that befalls, as the result of unknown or unconsidered forces; the issue of uncertain conditions; an event not calculated upon; an unexpected occurrence; a happening; accident; fortuity; casualty.
- The operation or activity of such agent.
- A supposed material or psychical agent or mode of activity other than a force, law, or purpose; fortune; fate; -- in this sense often personified.
- Fortuity; especially, the absence of a cause necessitating an event, or the absence of any known reason why an event should turn out one way rather than another, spoken of as if it were a real agency; the variability of an event under given general conditions, viewed as a real agency.
- Probability; the proportion of events favorable to a hypothesis out of all those which may occur: as, the chances are against your succeeding.
- Opportunity; a favorable contingency: as, now is your chance.
- Luck; fortune; that which happens to or befalls one.
- Vicissitude; contingent or unexpected events in a series or collectively.
- A contingent or unexpected event; an event which might or might not befall.
- Hence Risk; hazard; a balanced possibility of gain or loss, particularly in gaming; uncertainty.
- A throw of dice; the number turned up by a die.
- Fall; falling.
- An opportunity to make a putout or an assist that counts as an error if unsuccessful.
- A raffle or lottery ticket.
- A risk or hazard; a gamble.
- A favorable set of circumstances; an opportunity.
- An accidental or unpredictable event.
- The likelihood of something happening; possibility or probability.
- A force assumed to cause events that cannot be foreseen or controlled; luck.
- The unknown and unpredictable element in happenings that seems to have no assignable cause.
- An unknown and unpredictable phenomenon that causes an event to result one way rather than another
- A possibility due to a favorable combination of circumstances
- A measure of how likely it is that some event will occur
- A risk involving danger
HIT vs CHANCE: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Happening by chance; casual.
- Caused by or ascribable to chance; unexpected, random, or casual.
HIT vs CHANCE: VERB
- Reach a destination, either real or abstract
- Kill intentionally and with premeditation
- Reach a point in time, or a certain state or level
- Produce by manipulating keys or strings of musical instruments, also metaphorically
- Hit with a missile from a weapon
- Make a strategic, offensive, assault against an enemy, opponent, or a target
- Gain points in a game
- Encounter by chance
- Cause to move by striking
- Deal a blow to, either with the hand or with an instrument
- Hit against; come into sudden contact with
- Affect or afflict suddenly, usually adversely
- Consume to excess
- Hit the intended target or goal
- Pay unsolicited and usually unwanted sexual attention to
- Cause to experience suddenly
- Drive something violently into a location
- Come upon, as if by accident; meet with
- Take a risk in the hope of a favorable outcome
- Be the case by chance
HIT vs CHANCE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To ignite a mixture of air and fuel in the cylinders. Used of an internal-combustion engine.
- To score by shooting, especially in basketball.
- To bat or bat well.
- To achieve or find something desired or sought.
- To happen or occur.
- To attack.
- To come into contact with something; collide.
- To strike or deal a blow.
- To bite on or take (bait or a lure). Used of a fish.
- To deal cards to.
- To produce or represent accurately.
- To attain or reach.
- To go to or arrive at.
- To arise suddenly in the mind of; occur to.
- To win (a prize, for example), especially in a lottery.
- To be affected by (a negative development).
- To affect, especially adversely.
- To bat against (a pitcher or kind of pitch) successfully.
- To execute (a base hit) successfully.
- To propel with a stroke or blow.
- To perform (a shot or maneuver) successfully.
- To score in this way.
- To reach with a propelled ball or puck.
- To press or push (a key or button, for example).
- To cause an implement or missile to come forcefully into contact with.
- To deal a blow to.
- To cause to come into contact.
- To come into contact with forcefully; strike.
- N/A
HIT vs CHANCE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To befall; to happen to.
- To take the chances of; to venture upon; -- usually with it as object.
- Used with the impersonal subject it and a following clause or infinitive to indicate the occurrence of a usually unexpected or chance event.
- To have the fortune (to be or do something); happen.
- To take the risk or hazard of.
HIT vs CHANCE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Come into sudden contact with
- Hit against
- Meet with
- Come upon, as if by accident
- A number expressing the ratio of favorable cases to the whole number of cases possible
- The possibility of future success
- Occurring or appearing or singled out by chance
- Synonyms Casual, Fortuitous, etc. See accidental.
- Resulting from or due to chance; casual; unexpected: as, a chance remark; a chance customer.
- To risk; hazard; take the chances of: as, the thing may be dangerous, but I will chance it.
- To befall or happen to.
- To happen; fall out; come or arrive without design or expectation.
- By chance; perchance.
- (idiom) (on the off chance) In the slight hope or possibility.
- (idiom) (by chance) Possibly; perchance.
- (idiom) (by chance) Without plan; accidentally.
HIT vs CHANCE: RELATED WORDS
- Chance, Pip, Make, Tally, Stumble, Happen, Collision, Score, Strike, Striking, Reach, Bang, Shoot, Bump, Smash
- Casual, Accidental, Find, Adventure, Encounter, Hit, Bump, Hazard, Fortune, Happen, Risk, Gamble, Luck, Probability, Opportunity
HIT vs CHANCE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Slay, Find, Chance, Make, Tally, Happen, Collision, Score, Strike, Striking, Reach, Bang, Shoot, Bump, Smash
- Casual, Accidental, Find, Adventure, Encounter, Hit, Bump, Hazard, Fortune, Happen, Risk, Gamble, Luck, Probability, Opportunity
HIT vs CHANCE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Tom hit Jack and Jack hit him back.
- Race up the wall to hit the targets and slide back down, but can you hit the red?
- That does now vary quite a bit depending on how badly hit the colleges have been hit in terms of funding.
- She may not have hit the bottle, but I believe a few have hit her.
- The shock wave hit our building, and for a moment we thought an earthquake had hit.
- Healingcan never restore more hit points to a character than his maximum hit point total.
- PM I like to hit mine with duck fat before they hit the kettle.
- Then they hit it big with an unlikely novelty hit, the California raisins.
- While the puzzles can be hit or miss, they mostly hit.
- HIT or shall we HIT it on the head?
- Sure, but every student deserves a second chance.
- Forget your chance at going further in life.
- Masterbuilt for a chance to be featured linktr.
- THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO BE HELPED QUICKLY.
- To have the chance to get divorced, you have to have the chance to get married first.
- Branch Rickey first embraced Jackie, the organization that took the first chance with a black player and has taken a chance with me.
- They give you a chance to gather your thoughts, and your audience a chance to think.
- If the threat keeps moving forward, cross fire increases the chance of kills and reduces the chance of detection.
- High chance to apply Bleeding, low chance to stun targets.
- Those who trust to chance must abide by the results of chance.
HIT vs CHANCE: QUESTIONS
- When did the hurricane hit Wilmington North Carolina?
- What time will thunderstorms hit central Iowa Wednesday?
- What happens when avalanches hit California ski destinations?
- When did Hurricane Katrina hit Plaquemines Parish Louisiana?
- How much does piercing hit increase penetration damage?
- When did Hurricane Charley hit Punta Gorda Florida?
- Where did Hurricane Humberto hit in September 2007?
- How many tornadoes have hit Alberta and Saskatchewan?
- Why do we say'hit the hay'instead of'hit the sack'?
- Did Sam Snead hit the longest homer ever hit at Wrigley Field?
- What is the market capitalization of Clifford Chance?
- Does critical strike chance affect the chance to score a critical strike?
- Why did Chance Chance leave The Young and the Restless?
- What is the meaning behind Milky Chance's song Milky Chance?
- Should chance <25 and chance <20 both run at the same time?
- What are Brecht's uses of chance and chance-based scores?
- Could last chance mercantile get a second chance in Monterey County?
- Is Chance Chance Pe Dance based on Shahid Kapoor's life?
- How many times has Chance Chance been spotted in the Sun?
- Who are chance and chance Pollard from I Love New York?