The main parts of a door knocker are the knocker (the metal piece that you strike on the door) and the strike plate (the metal plate attached to the door that the knocker hits). Some door knockers also have a decorative backplate that holds the knocker and strike plate in place on the door.
If you "pound" on a door, you are knocking very heavily on the door, possibly with a clenched fist.
an umpire calls a strike when the ball is in the strike zone. personal my strike zone is chest to shin. to call a strike, u raise your right hand up to your ear and make a fist an call out "STRIKE!"
You answered you own question, It's called the latch and the part it latches / hooks onto is called the strike.
A door jamb is the part of a door opening to which the door hinges, the strike plate, and the door stop are attached.
Yes, the word 'fist' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a hand with tightly closed fingers, a word for a thing. The word 'fist' is also a verb; to strike or grasp with a clenched hand.
Strike when you hit someone with a piece of something is "ta"; struck when you hit someone with a vehicle is "so'a" or "taia"; strike/struck/punch with a fist is "tu'i" or "moto"; strike/struck with feelings is "o'otia"; strike dead is "tu'ipe".
The term "Back Door" could be used for both a slider, and a curve ball. It refers to a baseball that was thrown outside of the strike zone, misses the plate but, is caught behind the plate, and called a strike. Technically it should be called a "ball" because it never crosses the plate but, because it is caught behind the plate and appears to be a strike to the umpire; It is said it came in through the "back Door"
It is to beat or hit, repeatedly with a blunt instrument as in "he pounded on the door with his fist".
what was the first microcomputer called.
A strike mediator is called an arbiter.
The hand with the fingers doubled into the palm; the closed hand, especially as clinched tightly for the purpose of striking a blow., The talons of a bird of prey., the index mark [/], used to direct special attention to the passage which follows., To strike with the fist., To gripe with the fist.