RUSH vs HASTEN: NOUN
- An anxious and eager movement to get to or from a place.
- A sudden movement toward something.
- The swift release of a store of affective force
- Any of various grasslike wetland plants of the genus Juncus, having stiff hollow or pithy stems and small usually clustered brownish flowers.
- Any of various similar plants, such as a bulrush.
- The act of moving hurriedly and in a careless manner
- Grasslike plants growing in wet places and having cylindrical often hollow stems
- Physician and Revolutionary American leader; signer of the Declaration of Independence (1745-1813)
- A sudden forceful flow
- (American football) an attempt to advance the ball by running into the line
- General haste or busyness.
- The stem of one of these plants, used in making baskets, mats, and chair seats.
- A sudden widespread demand.
- (See nut-rush, scouring-rush, and wood-rush.)
- The lemon-grass or ginger-grass, Andropogon Schœnanthus.
- A small patch of underwood. Halliwell. [Prov. Eng.]
- Figuratively, anything weak, worthless, or of trivial value; the merest trifle; a straw.
- A wick. Compare rush-candle.
- Any plant belonging to the order Juncaceæ, especially a plant of the genus Juncus; also extended to some sedges (Carex), horsetails (Equisetum), and a few other plants.
- The intensely pleasurable sensation experienced immediately after use of a stimulant or a mind-altering drug.
- A sudden, brief exhilaration.
- A surge or release of emotion: : flow.
- A drive by a Greek society on a college campus to recruit new members.
- The first, unedited print of a movie scene.
- A rapid advance of the puck toward the opponent's goal in ice hockey.
- An act of running at a passer or kicker in order to block or prevent a play.
- An attempt to advance the ball from scrimmage by carrying it.
- A large or overwhelming number or amount.
- A rapid, often noisy flow or passage.
- A sudden burst of activity
- A sudden attack; an onslaught.
- N/A
RUSH vs HASTEN: ADJECTIVE
- Not accepting reservations
- Performed with or requiring great haste or urgency.
- N/A
RUSH vs HASTEN: VERB
- Step on it
- Run with the ball, in football
- Urge to an unnatural speed
- Act or move at high speed
- Attack suddenly
- Cause to move fast or to rush or race
- Cause to occur rapidly
- To cause some scheduled event to happen earlier.
- To make someone speed up or make something happen quicker.
- To move in a quick fashion.
- Cause to occur rapidly
- Step on it
- Act or move at high speed
- Speed up the progress of; facilitate
- Move fast
RUSH vs HASTEN: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To attack swiftly and suddenly.
- To perform with great haste.
- To cause to act with haste.
- To transport or carry hastily.
- To move swiftly; hurry.
- To cause to move rapidly.
- To advance the ball or attempt to advance the ball from scrimmage by carrying it rather than passing.
- To flow or surge rapidly, often with noise.
- To make a sudden or swift attack or charge.
- To act with great haste.
- To entertain or pay great attention to.
- To run toward (a passer or kicker) in order to block or disrupt a play.
- To cause to happen sooner than otherwise would be the case.
- To cause to move or act swiftly.
- To move or act swiftly. : speed.
- To move with celerity; to be rapid in motion; to act speedily or quickly; to go quickly.
- To speed up; accelerate.
RUSH vs HASTEN: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To press; to drive or urge forward; to push on; to precipitate; to accelerate the movement of; to expedite; to hurry.
RUSH vs HASTEN: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To gather rushes.
- To move or drive forward with impetuosity, violence, or tumultuous rapidity.
- To move or act with undue eagerness, or without due deliberation and preparation; hurry: as, to rush into business or politics.
- In foot-ball, to fill the position of a rusher.
- To take part in a college rush. See rush, n., 5.
- To cause to rush; cause to go swiftly or violently; drive or thrust furiously; hence, to force impetuously or hastily; hurry; overturn.
- Specifically In foot-ball, to force by main strength toward the goal of one's opponents: said of the ball.
- To secure by rushing.
- To cause to hasten; especially, to urge to undue haste; drive; push.
- Move hurridly
- Done under pressure
- Act at high speed
- Physician and American Revolutionary leader
- Move fast
- Speed up the progress of
- Move hurridly
- Act at high speed
- Synonyms Hasten, Hurry. To hasten is to work, move, etc., quickly, but properly not too quickly; to hurry is to go too fast for dignity, comfort, or thoroughness: as, to hasten to tell a piece of good news; to hasten the erection of a building; to hurry through a lesson; to look hurried. While hasten has come to be thus used only in a good sense, haste, n., hasty, and hastiness retain a bad meaning as well as a good: as, the book was evidently written in haste; he had a hasty temper; he had occasion to regret his hastiness. Indeed, hasty and hastiness usually convey censure.
- To move or act with celerity; be rapid, speedy, or quick; make haste: applied primarily to voluntary action.
- Facilitate
- To cause to move or act with celerity; cause to make haste; drive or urge forward; expedite.
RUSH vs HASTEN: RELATED WORDS
- Hotfoot, Induce, Charge, Spate, Kick, Thrill, Speed, Hasten, Upsurge, Flush, Bang, Haste, Surge, Hurried, Hurry
- Race, Bucket along, Rush along, Pelt along, Belt along, Cannonball along, Look sharp, Hotfoot, Hie, Rush, Speed, Hurry, Stimulate, Induce, Expedite
RUSH vs HASTEN: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Race, Hie, Stimulate, Induce, Charge, Kick, Thrill, Speed, Hasten, Flush, Bang, Haste, Surge, Hurried, Hurry
- Advance, Activate, Streamline, Quicken, Precipitate, Accelerate, Race, Look sharp, Hie, Rush, Speed, Hurry, Stimulate, Induce, Expedite
RUSH vs HASTEN: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Pace Rush Line that only allows defensive players who are behind this line to rush the QB.
- Space Pirate Rush, allows Ridley to rush forwards and cover a decent amount of horizontal space.
- Rush Bill Payments, TD Beyond Checking accounts will be reimbursed for Rush Bill Payment fees.
- Rush Bill Payments, Beyond Checking accounts will be reimbursed for Rush Bill Payment fees.
- Each and every serve will be treated as a rush, without the rush fees.
- Endowed Chair of Orthopedic Surgery, Rush University Medical Center or Rush Oak Hospital.
- Our rush and super rush ordering handles urgent typing, get breakneck TATs.
- Does rush hour see a rush of emotions?
- Broadway after the summer rush and holiday rush, respectively.
- We welcome alumni rush referrals and interested students can register for rush on the Rush page of this website.
- But its extreme malfunction may also hasten death.
- Why should anyone hasten to their red elegance?
- One lawsuit was filed to hasten the process.
- Not only in him I hasten to add.
- And they hasten to rescue their captured mother.
- Thou canst not hasten the creation of art.
- Africa must hasten efforts to integrate digital practices.
- Can We Hasten the Second Coming of Christ?
- Anything we can do to hasten your departure?
- Stir not thy tongue herewith to hasten it.
RUSH vs HASTEN: QUESTIONS
- What are the similarities between the Klondike Gold Rush and gold rush?
- How long after the Victorian Gold Rush did the Yilgarn gold rush occur?
- How long did Rush Limbaugh host the Rush Limbaugh Show?
- How does bull rush work without the improved bull rush feat?
- What do you think about Rush's'the art of Rush'cover?
- What episode of Big Time Rush does Rush sing Blow Your Speakers?
- What is the ISBN number for Rush's Rush and philosophy?
- Did rush rush ever play Tom Sawyer live in YZ 1981?
- Why is Rush Rush's seat so important to Chicagoans?
- Why did Rush Limbaugh create the character Rush Revere?
- Why did the Japanese Emperor hasten to end the war?
- How did the modern state hasten the process of assimilation?
- Why did I hasten round the corner to sift this ancient Boatwright?
- Does double effect apply to palliative care interventions that hasten death?
- Do bad actors hasten the departure of effective board members?
- How many examples of hasten are there in a sentence?
- What does the Bible say about hasten to my assistance?
- Why do some parents hasten the fall from innocence?
- Do opioids hasten death in patients with advanced illness?
- Do physicians hasten death when there is suffering?