rush 1 (rsh)
v. rushed, rush·ing, rush·es
v.intr.
1. To move or act swiftly; hurry.
2. To make a sudden or swift attack or charge.
3. To flow or surge rapidly, often with noise: Tons of water rushed over the falls.
4. Football To move the ball by running.
v.tr.
1. To cause to move or act with unusual haste or violence.
2. To perform with great haste: rushed completion of the project.
3. To attack swiftly and suddenly: Infantry rushed the enemy after the artillery barrage.
4. To transport or carry hastily: An ambulance rushed her to the hospital.
5. To entertain or pay great attention to: They rushed him for their fraternity.
6. Football To run at (a passer or kicker) in order to block or disrupt a play.
n.
1. A sudden forward motion.
2.
a. Surging emotion: a rush of shame.
b. An anxious and eager movement to get to or from a place: a rush to the goldfields.
c. A sudden, very insistent, generalized demand: a rush for gold coins.
3. General haste or busyness: The office always operates in a rush.
4. A sudden attack; an onslaught.
5. A rapid, often noisy flow or passage. See Synonyms at flow.
6. Football
a. An attempt to move the ball by running.
b. An act of running at a passer or kicker in order to block or prevent a play.
7. Sports A rapid advance of the puck toward the opponent's goal in ice hockey.
8. rushes The first, unedited print of a movie scene.
9.
a. A time of attention, usually one in which extensive social activity occurs.
b. A drive by a Greek society on a college campus to recruit new members: a sorority rush.
10.
a. The intensely pleasurable sensation experienced immediately after use of a stimulant or a mind-altering drug.
b. A sudden, brief exhilaration: A familiar rush overtook him each time the store announced a half-price special on expensive stereo equipment.
adj.
Performed with or requiring great haste or urgency: a rush job; a rush order.