Crossword clues for hammered
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hammer \Ham"mer\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Hammered (-m[~e]rd); p. pr. & vb. n. Hammering.]
To beat with a hammer; to beat with heavy blows; as, to hammer iron.
To form or forge with a hammer; to shape by beating. ``Hammered money.''
--Dryden.-
To form in the mind; to shape by hard intellectual labor; -- usually with out.
Who was hammering out a penny dialogue.
--Jeffry.
Wiktionary
(context slang English) drunk; inebriated. v
(en-past of: hammer)
WordNet
adj. shaped or worked with a hammer and often showing hammer marks; "a bowl of hammered brass"
Wikipedia
Hammered is the sixteenth studio album by the band Motörhead, released 9 April 2002, on Steamhammer, their sixth with the label and beating the Bronze Records era total of original full-length album releases. It was also the beginning of distribution in North America, and other territories, under Sanctuary Records and their subsidiary Metal-Is.
Hammered may refer to:
- Hammered (Wicked Tinkers album), a 2000 album by The Wicked Tinkers
- Hammered (Motörhead album), a 2002 album by Motörhead
- Hammered (Bear novel), a 2005 novel by Elizabeth Bear
- Hammered (Hearne novel), a 2011 novel by Kevin Hearne
- Hammered coinage
- Slang for getting drunk
Hammered is a science fiction novel by Elizabeth Bear first published on 28 December 2004 by Bantam Spectra. The book won the 2006 Locus Award for Best First Novel. It is the first book of a trilogy made of Hammered, Scardown, and Worldwired.
Hammered is the third novel in Kevin Hearne's urban fantasy series, The Iron Druid Chronicles and is the sequel to Hexed. It was released on July 5, 2011.
Usage examples of "hammered".
Hammered silver, an arched neck, great dark eyes that looked Aris full in the face.
Big Bob hammered and beat and bashed, swearing huge and terrible oaths, pulling out tufts of synthetic hair and bruising synthetic skin.
In addition to this flattening of affect, electronic media brings science fiction to its audience free of Science Fiction Culture, the history and view of science fiction laboriously hammered out over the last sixty or seventy years, created originally by dedicated fanatics wading up to their knees in gelatinous hectograph fluids.
Weapons he hoarded in plenty, and the ironsmiths of twenty or more tribes hammered and forged at his order.
Timayta asked Honi, as the two of them hammered on the sword and shield of a blackbearded male.
As she searched quickly for a weapon, drawer to drawer, cupboard to cupboard, the bones in her legs jellified, while her heart hardened into a sledge that hammered against her ribs.
The great box was in the same place, close against the wall, but the lid was laid on it, not fastened down, but with the nails ready in their places to be hammered home.
Hal Samdu hammered and levered at the fastening with one of the tripod legs.
She had news too from across the Atlantic, news that spoke of an imminent American invasion of Canada, and Sharpe, sitting in the mirador, had the sense of watching a whole world drawn into a maelstrom of flame and shot like that which hammered, unceasing, below.
He hammered it home with the heel of his hand, muffling the draft to a small, cold seep, then bent to retrieve his fallen papers.
Again and again Frank hammered the desperate plebe, getting few blows in return and seeming to mind none of them no more than drops of rain.
Bronze torches had been hammered into the softer sandstone, and a Castlemilk luntman was busy filling their fuel reservoirs with pure-burning rapeseed oil.
Floor to ceiling, the velvet darkness lay stamped with dull gleams where steel, riveted, hammered, and forged in the myriad shapes used for war, chipped back intermittent reflections.
Country Squire wagon soft on its shocks, with one dented fender hammered out semi-smooth but the ruddy rustproofing underpaint left to do for a finish.
Then, with the maul, after repeatedly smiting the upper end of this iron rod, he placed the blunted needle endwise on the top of it, and less strongly hammered that, several times, the mate still holding the rod as before.