PUSHES vs PRESS: NOUN
- An effort to advance
- An electrical switch operated by pressing a button
- Enterprising or ambitious drive
- Plural form of push.
- The force used in pushing
- The act of applying force in order to move something away
- The act of pressing; the exertion of pressure
- A weightlift in which the barbell is lifted to shoulder height and then smoothly lifted overhead
- Any machine that exerts pressure to form or shape or cut materials or extract liquids or compress solids
- A machine used for printing
- Clamp to prevent wooden rackets from warping when not in use
- The gathering and publishing of news in the form of newspapers or magazines
- Newspaper writers and photographers
- A tall piece of furniture that provides storage space for clothes; has a door and rails or hooks for hanging clothes
- Conscription or impressment into service, especially into the army or navy.
- An official warrant for impressing men into military service.
- A large gathering; a crowd.
- The kind or extent of coverage a person or event receives in the media.
- The people involved in the media, as news reporters and broadcasters.
- News or other information disseminated to the public in printed, broadcast, or electronic form.
- The communications media considered as a whole, especially the agencies that collect, publish, transmit, or broadcast news and other information to the public.
- A publishing company.
- A place or establishment where matter is printed.
- A printing press.
- Any of various machines or devices that apply pressure.
- The state of urgently demanding notice or attention
- A dense crowd of people
PUSHES vs PRESS: VERB
- Sell or promote the sale of (illegal goods such as drugs)
- Press, drive, or impel (someone) to action or completion of an action
- Move with force, He pushed the table into a corner movewithforcehepushedthetablei
- Press against forcefully without being able to move
- Move strenuously and with effort
- Make strenuous pushing movements during birth to expel the baby
- Strive and make an effort to reach a goal
- Make publicity for; try to sell (a product)
- Exert oneself continuously, vigorously, or obtrusively to gain an end or engage in a crusade for a certain cause or person; be an advocate for
- Approach a certain age or speed
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of push.
- Ask for or request earnestly
- Lift weights
- Force or impel in an indicated direction
- Exert oneself continuously, vigorously, or obtrusively to gain an end or engage in a crusade for a certain cause or person; be an advocate for
- To be oppressive or burdensome
- Crowd closely
- Create by pressing
- Press from a plastic
- Make strenuous pushing movements during birth to expel the baby
- Exert pressure or force to or upon
- Place between two surfaces and apply weight or pressure
- Be urgent
- Squeeze or press together
PUSHES vs PRESS: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To advance eagerly; move forward urgently.
- To exert force or pressure.
- To lift (a weight) to a position above the head without moving the legs.
- To insist that someone accept (something). Often used with on or upon.
- To try to influence or persuade, as by insistent arguments; pressure or entreat.
- To place in trying or distressing circumstances.
- To carry on or advance vigorously (an attack, for instance).
- To bear down on or attack.
- To make (a sound recording), originally by pressing (a vinyl phonograph record) under pressure in a mold.
- To iron (clothing, for example).
- To reshape or make compact by applying steady force; compress.
- To extract (juice, for example) by squeezing or compressing.
- To squeeze the juice or other contents from.
- To squeeze or clasp in fondness or concern.
- To move by applying pressure.
- To exert steady weight or force against.
- To be worrisome or depressing; weigh heavily.
- To assemble closely and in large numbers; crowd.
- To continue a course of action, especially in spite of difficulties.
- To require haste or urgent action.
- To employ urgent persuasion or entreaty.
- To iron clothes or other material.
- To raise or lift a weight in a press.
- To insist upon or put forward insistently.
- To employ a press.
- In golf, to try to hit long or risky shots, typically with unsuccessful results.
PUSHES vs PRESS: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To take arbitrarily or by force, especially for public use.
- To force into service in the army or navy; impress.
- To use in a manner different from the usual or intended, especially in an emergency.
PUSHES vs PRESS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Be an advocate for
- The exertion of pressure
- The act of pressing
- Press and smooth with a heated iron
- The state of demanding notice or attention
PUSHES vs PRESS: RELATED WORDS
- Push button, Button, Energy, Press, Advertize, Campaign, Tug, Crusade, Force, Force, Fight, Agitate, Promote, Thrust, Drive
- Jam, Compact, Constrict, Bid, Weigh, Beseech, Insistency, Exhort, Crush, Pressure, Urge, Insistence, Push, Imperativeness, Fourth estate
PUSHES vs PRESS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Crowd, Labor, Push button, Button, Energy, Press, Advertize, Campaign, Force, Force, Fight, Agitate, Promote, Thrust, Drive
- Squeeze, Jam, Compact, Constrict, Bid, Weigh, Beseech, Insistency, Exhort, Crush, Pressure, Urge, Push, Imperativeness, Fourth estate
PUSHES vs PRESS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Godzilla pushes toward Ghidorah during the final battle?
- Each generation pushes other generations to do it.
- Francke pushes towards a point which seems contradictive.
- Smith pushes two pieces of modeling clay QUIZNEWSUPERDRAFT.
- With Marcotti still absent, Horncastle pushes for Jorginho.
- Spontaneously, the spring pushes the piston up and the piston pushes the saline solution of the hydraulic circuit into the cuff.
- The tennis ball pushes the scale down more than the feather pushes down.
- So water pushes upward more strongly than the wood pushes downward, and the wood floats.
- Gravity pushes them down, warm air pushes them up.
- Team Development administrators can require that pushes undergo code review before accepting pushes.
- Press to drop down from the line, or press to walk on the wire.
- White House press secretary Jen Psaki speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Friday, Jan.
- Hold and press to apply a charge, and then press to detonate the highlighted Explosive Gel.
- Press freedom is routinely cast in instrumental terms focused on this proxy purpose: Without a free press there can be no free society.
- Our facilities house the latest press brake press machinery including robotic part manipulation and stacking.
- Press twice and hold on the second press to scan forward through a track.
- Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
- Senator; updating press lists; and managing a press intern.
- Deputy press secretary and earlier press assistant to Sen.
- Criminalising the press obviously impacts negatively on press freedom.
PUSHES vs PRESS: QUESTIONS
- What happens when Trenton pushes you directly into the diaper?
- What pushes you to be more creative in your projects?
- What pushes clouds at different heights in the atmosphere?
- Which is like an electrical pressure that pushes charge?
- What are pushes and pulls in early childhood education?
- Will sled pushes and pulls Change Your strongman game?
- What pushes food down through your digestive tract?
- How many pushes of Remicade for rheumatoid arthritis?
- Which is an invention that pushes globalization forward?
- Are there any wireless doorbells with doorbell pushes?
- What happens when you press a shirt with a vapor press?
- Was an Associated Press journalist accredited to the Associated Press arrested in Ethiopia?
- Does the modified YMCA bench press test predict 1 repetition maximum bench press?
- What is the Gambia Press Union doing to promote press freedom?
- Why do bench press and shoulder press work the anterior Delts?
- Why choose a Wiley-IEEE Press or Computer Society Press book?
- How do you calculate the cutting force of a press press?
- What is the part number for a Tecumseh c171 press press?
- What is the Deluxe App reloading press (automatic processing press)?
- What percentage of your bench press should be overhead press?