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Ella Ye Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Hit like a hammer

In 1606, the bubonic plague returned to London. Two years earlier, it had killed 30,000 of its inhabitants. The plague hit like a hammer that winter. This time the city took no chances. It shut down on a massive scale. All the theaters closed. This was a bitter blow for playwrights and actors. Out of work and under house arrest, they had little to do but twiddle their thumbs and play the waiting game.


hit like a hammer: does it mean it has given the city a big blow? I don't find this phrase in the dictionary but sounds like this meaning

  

Top answer

Ella Ye hit like a hammer: does it mean it has given the city a big blow? I don't find this phrase in the dictionary but sounds like this meaning "Hit like a hammer" is not a standard expression. It is just this writer's simile for the disastrous effect the plague had.

  • Ella Ye hit like a hammer: does it mean it has given the city a big blow?
  • I don't find this phrase in the dictionary but sounds like this meaning "Hit like a hammer" is not a standard expression.
  • It is just this writer's simile for the disastrous effect the plague had.
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1 Answers
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Ella Yehit like a hammer: does it mean it has given the city a big blow? I don't find this phrase in the dictionary but sounds like this meaning

"Hit like a hammer" is not a standard expression. It is just this writer's simile for the disastrous effect the plague had.

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