rush
1 Americanverb (used without object)
verb (used with object)
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to perform, accomplish, or finish with speed, impetuosity, or violence.
They rushed the work to make the deadline.
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to carry or convey with haste.
to rush an injured person to the hospital.
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to cause to move, act, or progress quickly; hurry.
He rushed his roommate to get to the party on time.
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to send, push, force, impel, etc., with unusual speed or haste.
to rush a bill through Congress.
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to attack suddenly and violently; charge.
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to overcome or capture (a person, place, etc.).
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Informal. to heap attentions on; court intensively; woo.
to rush an attractive newcomer.
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to entertain (a prospective fraternity or sorority member) before making bids for membership.
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Football.
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to carry (the ball) forward across the line of scrimmage.
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to carry the ball (a distance) forward from the line of scrimmage.
The home team rushed 145 yards.
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(of a defensive team member) to attempt to force a way quickly into the backfield in pursuit of (the back in possession of the ball).
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noun
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the act of rushing; a rapid, impetuous, or violent onward movement.
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a hostile attack.
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an eager rushing of numbers of persons to some region that is being occupied or exploited, especially because of a new mine.
the gold rush to California.
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a sudden appearance or surge.
Seeing the old photo set off a rush of tears.
You’ll experience a massive rush of adrenaline as you find yourself in free fall.
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hurried activity; busy haste.
the rush of city life.
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a hurried state, as from pressure of affairs.
to be in a rush.
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press of work, business, traffic, etc., requiring extraordinary effort or haste.
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Football.
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an attempt to carry or instance of carrying the ball across the line of scrimmage.
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an act or instance of rushing the offensive back in possession of the ball.
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a scrimmage held as a form of sport between classes or bodies of students in colleges.
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Movies. rushes, daily.
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Also called flash. Slang. the initial, intensely pleasurable or exhilarated feeling experienced upon taking a narcotic or stimulant drug.
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The sheer ecstatic rush in that moment was the best feeling on earth.
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Informal. a series of lavish attentions paid a woman by a suitor.
He gave her a big rush.
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the rushing by a fraternity or sorority.
adjective
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requiring or done in haste: rush work.
a rush order;
rush work.
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characterized by excessive business, a press of work or traffic, etc..
The cafeteria's rush period was from noon to two in the afternoon.
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characterized by the rushing of potential new members by a sorority or fraternity.
rush week on the university campus.
noun
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any grasslike plant of the genus Juncus, having pithy or hollow stems, found in wet or marshy places.
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any plant of the rush family.
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any of various similar plants.
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a stem of such a plant, used for making chair bottoms, mats, baskets, etc.
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something of little or no value; trifle.
not worth a rush.
noun
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Benjamin, 1745–1813, U.S. physician and political leader: author of medical treatises.
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his son Richard, 1780–1859, U.S. lawyer, politician, and diplomat.
verb
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to hurry or cause to hurry; hasten
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to make a sudden attack upon (a fortress, position, person, etc)
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to proceed or approach in a reckless manner
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to proceed with precipitate haste
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(intr) to come, flow, swell, etc, quickly or suddenly
tears rushed to her eyes
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slang to cheat, esp by grossly overcharging
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(tr) to make a concerted effort to secure the agreement, participation, etc, of (a person)
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(intr) American football to gain ground by running forwards with the ball
noun
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the act or condition of rushing
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a sudden surge towards someone or something
a gold rush
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a sudden surge of sensation, esp produced by a drug
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a sudden demand
adjective
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requiring speed or urgency
a rush job
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characterized by much movement, business, etc
a rush period
noun
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any annual or perennial plant of the genus Juncus , growing in wet places and typically having grasslike cylindrical leaves and small green or brown flowers: family Juncaceae Many species are used to make baskets
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any of various similar or related plants, such as the woodrush, scouring rush, and spike-rush
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something valueless; a trifle; straw
not worth a rush
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short for rush light
Related Words
Rush, hurry, dash, speed imply swiftness of movement. Rush implies haste and sometimes violence in motion through some distance: to rush to the store. Hurry suggests a sense of strain or agitation, a breathless rushing to get to a definite place by a certain time: to hurry to an appointment. Dash implies impetuosity or spirited, swift movement for a short distance: to dash to the neighbor's. Speed means to go fast, usually by means of some type of transportation, and with some smoothness of motion: to speed to a nearby city.
Other Word Forms
- rusher noun
- rushingly adverb
- rushlike adjective
- unrushed adjective
Etymology
Origin of rush1
First recorded in 1325–75; Middle English verb rushe(n), ruishe, from Anglo-French russher, russer, Old French re(h)usser, re(h)user, ruser, from Late Latin recūsāre “to push back,” Latin: “to refuse”; noun derivative of the verb; recuse, ruse
Origin of rush2
First recorded before 900; Middle English risch(e), ris(s)e, rich, Old English rysc, risc, rix; cognate with Dutch, Middle High German rusch, obsolete German Rusch, German Rausch
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.