Bat one thousand
Have a perfect record, as in In meeting deadlines, she’s batting one thousand. The term comes from baseball statistics, where it signifies getting a hit for every turn at bat. It was transferred to other activities in the 1920s.
Read Also:
- Bat one's gums
bat one’s gums verb phrase (Variations: beat or hump or flap may replace bat; chops or jaw or jowls or lip may replace gums) To talk, esp idly or frivolously: He didn’t mean it—he was just batting his gums/ Well, you weren’t just flapping your lip that time (WWII)
- Bat out
Sports. the wooden club used in certain games, as baseball and cricket, to strike the ball. a racket, especially one used in badminton or table tennis. a whip used by a jockey. the act of using a club or racket in a game. the right or turn to use a club or racket. a heavy […]
- Bat one's wings
bat one’s wings verb phrase To be futile; waste one’s effort: I’ve got to get people away from denial. Until I can do that I’m kind of batting my wings (1990s+)
- Bat printing
ornamenting of ceramics by means of an adhesive substance, as linseed oil, transferred onto the ceramic surface from a sheet of glue or gelatin, dusted with color, and fired. Historical Examples bat printing succeeded the printing from engraved or etched plates. The Collector’s Handbook to Keramics of the Renaissance and Modern Periods William Chaffers
- Bat ray
batfish (def 2).