Rushed synonyms
Category:
Part of speech:
To drive at a speed exceeding a legal limit:
To move steadily or continuously
(Football) To maneuver about in the backfield while seeking an open receiver to whom to pass the ball; also, to run with the ball if unable to find a receiver
To act or proceed swiftly and energetically:
Necessitating haste
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A wind with a speed from 103 to 117 km (64 to 73 mi) per hour, rating 11 on the Beaufort scale.
To excel or exceed in power; to cause to yield; to subdue.
To defeat is defined as to beat someone at something or to prevent something from happening.
To destroy or wreck:
Contraction of of course.
To load to capacity; fill:
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Sprint is defined as to run a short race at full speed.
To flow or spring from or as from a well; gush (up, forth, down, out, etc.)
retarded (antonym)
(Intransitive) To decelerate; to slow down.
To cause to be or come faster; speed up; accelerate
Race is defined as to compete in a contest of speed.
To dash out suddenly; spring; dart
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To begin to affect; to act upon injuriously or destructively; to begin to decompose or waste.
In criminal and tort law, an act, usually consisting of a threat or attempt to inflict bodily injury upon another person, coupled with the apparent present ability to succeed in carrying out the threat or the attempt if not prevented, that causes the person to have a reasonable fear or apprehension of immediate harmful or offensive contact. No intent to cause battery or the fear or apprehension is required so long as the victim is placed in reasonable apprehension or fear. No actual physical injury is needed to establish an assault, but if there is any physical contact, the act constitutes both an assault and a battery.
To melt and flow:
To flow freely, continuously, or copiously
To flow out suddenly and plentifully; pour out; spout
To move or run smoothly with unbroken continuity, as in the manner characteristic of a fluid.
To move or progress rapidly:
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(Informal) To move with speed or violence
(Informal) To move or propel something with speed and force
To move lightly, nimbly, and rapidly.
To move, go, drive, etc. swiftly
To move quickly; hurry; run
To move violently or with speed; dash
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To move swiftly; dart.
To move swiftly; scurry.
To move swiftly and powerfully, as a rocket
To move at a vigorous gait:
To push one's way; move hurriedly
(Intransitive) To move with haste.
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(Scot., North Eng.) To move to other quarters, esp. by stealth
To move swiftly; flit; fly
To move or proceed rapidly:
To move suddenly and fast
To move or cause to move energetically and busily.
To move or drive rapidly or recklessly
lingered (antonym)
To remain feebly alive for some time before dying.
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delayed (antonym)
To retard; to stop, detain, or hinder, for a time.
dawdled (antonym)
(Intransitive) To move or walk lackadaisically.
moved (related)
To stir the emotions:
To stimulate is to excite, to invigorate or to spark someone's interest.
(Genetics) To cause an increase in the transcription of the RNA of (a gene).
hotfooted
(Informal) To hurry; hasten
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To move at high speed; go fast; hurry
To run hastily; scamper
To devote oneself to or undertake an activity earnestly or wholeheartedly:
To rise, flow, or gush out in or as in a flood
To seek the favor or company of persistently:
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guarded (antonym)
To keep safe from harm; watch over and protect; defend; shield
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Find another word for rushed. In this page you can discover 65 synonyms, antonyms, idiomatic expressions, and related words for rushed, like: hurried, speeded, streamed, scrambled, zoomed, pressured, rush, stormed, pressed, overpowered and defeated.