hammer something home

hammer something home
hammer something home
Fig. to try extremely hard to make someone understand or realize something. •

The boss hopes to hammer the firm's poor financial position home to the staff.

I tried to hammer home to Anne the fact that she would have to get a job.


Dictionary of American idioms. 2013.

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  • hammer something home — drive/hammer (something) home to say something very clearly and with a lot of force, often repeating it several times, so that you are sure that people understand it. She used charts and statistics to drive home her message that we need to… …   New idioms dictionary

  • drive (or hammer) something home — stress a point forcefully. → home …   English new terms dictionary

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  • hammer sth home — ► to make certain that something is understood by expressing it clearly and forcefully: »The severity of the slump in the housing market has been hammered home by figures released recently by the banks. hammer home a message/point »It is hoped… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive something home — drive/hammer (something) home to say something very clearly and with a lot of force, often repeating it several times, so that you are sure that people understand it. She used charts and statistics to drive home her message that we need to… …   New idioms dictionary

  • bring something home to — bring (something) home (to (someone)) to make something more clearly understood. Her visit to the war memorial brought home to her the suffering the war had caused. Usage notes: usually said about something that is difficult or unpleasant Related …   New idioms dictionary

  • bring (something) home — (to (someone)) to make something more clearly understood. Her visit to the war memorial brought home to her the suffering the war had caused. Usage notes: usually said about something that is difficult or unpleasant Related vocabulary: hammer… …   New idioms dictionary

  • bring something home to someone — bring (something) home (to (someone)) to make something more clearly understood. Her visit to the war memorial brought home to her the suffering the war had caused. Usage notes: usually said about something that is difficult or unpleasant Related …   New idioms dictionary

  • hammer — ham|mer1 [ˈhæmə US ər] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(tool)¦ 2 come/go under the hammer 3 hammer blow 4 hammer and tongs 5¦(gun)¦ 6¦(sport)¦ 7¦(piano)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin: hamor] 1.) …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • home — I [[t]ho͟ʊm[/t]] NOUN, ADJECTIVE, AND ADVERB USES ♦ homes 1) N COUNT: oft poss N, also at N Someone s home is the house or flat where they live. Last night they stayed at home and watched TV... The General divided his time between his shabby… …   English dictionary

  • home — noun 1》 the place where one lives permanently.     ↘a house or flat. 2》 an institution for people needing professional care. 3》 a place where something flourishes or from which it originated. 4》 the finishing point in a race. 5》 (in games) the… …   English new terms dictionary

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