The difference between Hit out of the park and Homer
When used as verbs, hit out of the park means to be exceedingly successful at (a particular enterprise), whereas homer means to hit a homer.
Homer is also noun with the meaning: a former hebrew unit of dry volume, about equal to 230l or 6½bushels.
check bellow for the other definitions of Hit out of the park and Homer
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Hit out of the park as a verb (slang, transitive):
To be exceedingly successful at (a particular enterprise).
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Homer as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):
A former Hebrew unit of dry volume, about equal to 230L or 6½bushels.
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Homer as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):
approximately the same volume as a liquid measure.
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Homer as a noun (baseball):
A four-base hit; a home run
Examples:
"The first baseman hit a homer to lead off the ninth."
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Homer as a noun:
A homing pigeon
Examples:
"Each of the pigeon fanciers released a homer at the same time."
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Homer as a noun (sports):
A person who is extremely devoted to his favorite team.
Examples:
"Joe is such a homer that he would never boo the Hometown Hobos, even if they are in last place in the league."
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Homer as a verb (baseball):
To hit a homer; to hit a home run.
Examples:
"The Sultan of Swat homered 714 times."