hit the pavement
English
editPronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
edithit the pavement (third-person singular simple present hits the pavement, present participle hitting the pavement, simple past and past participle hit the pavement)
- (idiomatic) To travel on foot, as on a sidewalk.
- 2007 July 31, Ceri Au, “Fighting for the Right to Flush”, in Time:
- But getting people to hit the pavement is more than just a health concern. . . . [M]unicipalities are looking to combat inner-city decay by keeping the streets flush with pedestrians.
- (idiomatic) To travel or begin to move in an automobile or other road vehicle.
- 1925, "Automotive Section: "Hitting it up" (advertisement)," Ottawa Citizen, 4 July (retrieved 28 Sep 2010):
- "And when we hit the pavement, we found we had covered the last 54 miles in an hour and twenty minutes."
- 1925, "Automotive Section: "Hitting it up" (advertisement)," Ottawa Citizen, 4 July (retrieved 28 Sep 2010):
Synonyms
edit- (begin to walk): hit the bricks, pound the pavement
- (begin to move in an auto): hit the road