1 TO HIT = To strike or come into contact with something.
Neutral and very common. Can be accidental or intentional.
Works in almost all everyday situations.
Examples
- The ball hit the window.
- I accidentally hit my head on the door.
- The car hit a tree.
- The cupboard doors hit each other when I close them too fast.
👉 Most natural general-purpose verb.
2 TO BUMP INTO = To hit something lightly and usually accidentally.
Common in everyday speech. Also used for meeting someone by chance.
Examples
- I bumped into a chair in the dark.
- She bumped into me at the supermarket.
- The trolley bumped into the wall.
- The cupboard doors bump into each other if you’re not careful.
- I bumped into an old friend yesterday. (met by chance)
👉 Implies light, accidental contact.
3 TO KNOCK AGAINST = To hit something, often producing a noise.
Often suggests repeated contact. Common when objects move because of wind or motion
Examples
- The window was knocking against the frame because of the wind.
- The ladder knocked against the wall.
- The cupboard doors knock against each other when there’s a draft.
👉 Often used when something “bangs” or “taps” against something else.
4 TO COLLIDE (with) = To crash into something.
Stronger than hit or bump into. More formal or technical.
Often used for vehicles, objects in motion, or scientific contexts.
Examples
- Two cars collided on the highway.
- The cyclist collided with a pedestrian.
- The planets could collide in the future.
- The cupboard doors collide if they’re badly aligned.
👉 Suggests a stronger or more serious impact.
5 TO CLASH (with) = To come into conflict or strike with force.
Often figurative (opinions, personalities, colors).
Physical use is usually dramatic (weapons, metal objects).
Not natural for normal household objects.
Physical examples
- The swords clashed during the fight.
- The cymbals clashed loudly.
Figurative examples
- Their opinions clash.
- The colors clash.
- I clashed with my boss about the project.
👉 Mostly used for conflict (physical or figurative).
6 TO STRIKE = To hit with force; more formal or dramatic than hit.
Often intentional.
Suggests force or suddenness.
Common in formal writing and news.
Very common in figurative expressions.
Physical examples
- The boxer struck his opponent.
- The hammer struck the nail.
- Lightning struck the tree.
- He struck the table with his fist.
Formal/event examples
- The ship struck a rock.
- The disease struck the village.
Figurative examples
- An idea suddenly struck me.
- I was struck by her kindness.
- The scene struck me as strange.
👉 Stronger and more formal than hit.
Comparison of the Verbs
| Verb | Strength of Impact | Formality Level | Typical Use | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| bump into | ⭐ (very light) | Informal / everyday | Light, accidental contact; also meeting by chance | I bumped into a chair in the dark. |
| hit | ⭐⭐ (neutral) | Neutral | General contact (accidental or intentional) | The ball hit the window. |
| knock against | ⭐⭐ (light–moderate) | Neutral | Contact that often produces noise; sometimes repeated | The window was knocking against the frame. |
| collide (with) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (strong) | More formal | Serious impacts (cars, objects in motion, scientific contexts) | Two cars collided on the highway. |
| strike | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (strong / forceful) | Formal / dramatic | Intentional, forceful, or literary impact; common in news | Lightning struck the tree. |
| clash (with) | ⭐⭐⭐ (physical) / figurative conflict | Neutral–formal | Physical force (weapons, metal) or figurative conflict | Their opinions clash. |
Simple Visual Scale (Impact Strength)
Light → Strong
bump into → hit → knock against → clash → collide / strike
Extra note
- Most common everyday verb: → hit
- Light accidental contact: → bump into
- With noise: → knock against
- Serious crash: → collide
- Dramatic / formal: → strike
- Conflict (often abstract): → clash
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