percuss
verb
- striking, knocking, tapping
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /pəˈkʌs/ / [pəˈkʰʌs] / /pɚˈkʌs/
verb
Etymology: From Latin percussus, past participle of percutiō (“to strike, to beat”), from per (“through”) + quatiō (“to shake, to strike”).
- To strike; to hit; to knock; to give a blow to.
“Solid bodies, if they be very softly percussed, give no sound.”
“Give me thy hand Gonzalo, thou art in our favour, / For we do love to cheriſh lofty ſpirits, / Such as percuſſe the Earth, and bound / With an erected countenance to the clouds.”
- To impact.
“Falling on the roof of the caravan, the hailstones percussed noisily.”
- To attempt to pinpoint the location or other quality of something by tapping on an overlying surface.
“The doctor percussed his chest to determine whether he had pneumonia.”
“Percussing a patient's spleen is best done while he is on his back.”