batter
oxford
views updated May 29 2018bat·ter1 / ˈbatər/ •
v. [tr.] strike repeatedly with hard blows; pound heavily and insistently: a prisoner was battered to death with a table leg fig. their idealism has been battered. ∎ [often as n.] (battering) subject (one's spouse, partner, or child) to repeated violence and assault. ∎ [usu. as n.] (battering) fig. censure, criticize, or defeat severely: the movie took a battering from critics.DERIVATIVES: bat·ter·er n.bat·ter2 •
n. a semiliquid mixture of flour, egg, and milk or water used in cooking, esp. for making cakes or for coating food before frying.bat·ter3 •
n. (in various sports, esp. baseball) a player who is batting.bat·ter4 •
n. a gradual backward slope in a wall or similar structure.•
v. [intr.] (of a wall) have a receding slope.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
batter
oxford
views updated May 11 2018batter. Slope, or inclination from the perpendicular, as in a
Vitruvian opening or on a retaining-wall or battered Egyptian
pylon-tower.
A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture JAMES STEVENS CURL
batter
oxford
views updated May 23 2018batter1 beat with repeated blows. XIV. — AN.
baterer, f. OF.
batre (mod.
battre) :- L.
battuere, later
battere; cf. BAT1 and
-ER4.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
batter
oxford
views updated May 14 2018batter2 paste used in cooking. XV. prob. f.
BATTER1, but cf. OF.
bat(e)ure beating.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
batter
oxford
views updated May 17 2018batter Thick liquid mixture of flour, milk, and eggs, used to coat fish before frying, fried alone to make pancakes or griddle cakes, or baked to make Yorkshire pudding.
A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition DAVID A. BENDER