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    beat
    [bēt]
    verb
    beat (verb) · beats (third person present) · beat (past tense) · beating (present participle) · beaten (past participle)
    1. strike (a person or an animal) repeatedly and violently so as to hurt or injure them, typically with an implement such as a club or whip:
      "if we were caught we were beaten" · "the victims were beaten to death with baseball bats" · "they beat me with a stick and punched me"
    2. defeat (someone) in a game or other competitive situation:
      "she beat him easily at chess" · "the Senators beat out the Yankees for the 1933 pennant"
    3. succeed in getting somewhere ahead of (someone):
      "the goalie beat him to the ball" · "I could beat him on my bicycle"
    4. (of a bird) move (the wings) up and down:
      "doves wheel around the rooftops, beating their wings"
    5. stir (cooking ingredients) vigorously with a fork, whisk, or beater to make a smooth or frothy mixture:
      "beat the butter until light and fluffy" · "beat the cream into the mixture"
    6. sailing
      sail into the wind, following a zigzag course with repeated tacking:
      "we beat southward all that first day"
      Similar:
      change course
      change direction
      change heading
      veer off/away
      sail into the wind
    noun
    beat (noun) · beats (plural noun)
    1. the movement of a bird's wings:
      "the beat of the swallow's wings as they dive after midges"
    2. an area allocated to a police officer to patrol:
      "public clamor for more police officers on the beat" · "a patrolman who strived to make his beat a safe one"
      • a spell of duty allocated to a police officer:
        "her beat ended at 6 a.m."
      • an area regularly frequented by someone, typically a prostitute:
        "a few, new to their beat, looked at him with interest"
      • informal
        a person's area of interest:
        "his beat is construction, property, and hotels"
    3. informal
      short for beatnik
    adjective
    beat (adjective)
    1. informal
      completely exhausted:
      "I'm beat—I need an hour or so to rest" · "I feel beat and out of ideas"
      Opposite:
      fresh as a daisy
      raring to go
    2. relating to the beat generation or its philosophy:
      "beat poet Allen Ginsberg"
    Origin
    Old English bēatan, of Germanic origin.
    Translate beat to
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    vencer, derrotar, ser melhor do que… Need a translator? Get a quick, free translation! BEAT meaning: 1. to defeat or do better than: 2. to be better or more enjoyable than another activity or…. Learn more.
    1. to strike forcefully and repeatedly: to beat a toy drum. 2. to hit (a person or animal) repeatedly so as to cause painful injury; thrash (often fol. by up ). 3. to dash against: rain beating the trees. 4. to flutter or flap: a bird beating its wings. 5. to sound, as on a drum: to beat a tattoo. 6. to stir vigorously.
    1. a regular stroke or its sound. I like the beat of that song. 2. a regular or usual course. a policeman's beat. 1. overcome; defeated. the beaten team; He looked tired and beaten. 2. mixed thoroughly. beaten egg. to approach a subject in an indirect way, without coming to the point or making any decision. 1. (of the sun) to give out great heat.
    verb (used without object),beat, beat·en or beat, beat·ing. to strike repeated blows; pound: She kept beating on my door, so I finally opened it. to throb or pulsate: His heart began to beat faster. to dash; strike (usually followed by against or on ): The sound of hail beating on the roof was deafening.
  3. Beat Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

  4. BEAT Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com

  5. beat verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes ...

  6. Beat - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com

  7. BEAT | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary

  8. Beat - definition of beat by The Free Dictionary

  9. BEAT definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

  10. BEAT | meaning - Cambridge Learner's Dictionary

  11. beat noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes ...

  12. beat - Wiktionary, the free dictionary