Pronunciation: /biːt ɪt/
verb to leave quickly or go away
A1 I told the dog to beat it when it tried to steal my sandwich.
A2 The teacher told the students to beat it after the bell rang.
B1 The security guard told the trespasser to beat it before calling the police.
B2 The manager asked the employee to beat it after repeated warnings about their behavior.
C1 The coach instructed the team to beat it and get some rest before the big game tomorrow.
C2 The politician was advised to beat it from the scandal before it caused further damage to their reputation.
pronoun refers to the person being told to leave quickly
A1 My mom told me to beat it when I asked her for more candy.
A2 The teacher asked the noisy students to beat it and focus on their work.
B1 The security guard told the troublemakers to beat it before calling the police.
B2 After causing a disturbance, the unruly patrons were asked to beat it by the bouncer.
C1 The manager warned the employees to beat it if they were not willing to follow company policies.
C2 The protesters were given a final warning to beat it before law enforcement intervened.
formal The security guard told the trespasser to beat it from the premises.
informal I told my little brother to beat it so I could have some alone time.
slang Hey man, you better beat it before you get yourself into trouble.
figurative No matter how hard he tried, he just couldn't beat it at the game.
beat it
beat it
beating it
beating it the most
beats it
will beat it
have beaten it
beating it
beats it
beat it
to beat it
beating it
beaten it