"Hurry" on its own is not a complete sentence. It is a verb that needs a subject to make it a complete sentence, such as "Hurry up!" where "you" is implied as the subject.
I had to hurry to catch the bus before it left the stop.
Yes, "Hurry up." is a sentence fragment because it lacks a subject. It is a command rather than a complete sentence.
Hurry is used as a verb in most cases. For example: To avoid being late, I had to hurry to my car and drive to work.
"You need to hurry!" shouted Kendall.
Stop dilly-dallying and make a decision about which movie we should watch tonight.
"Hurry" is a noun in the sentence, "He can disappear in a hurry." A clear indication that "hurry" is a noun is that it has the indefinite article "a" before it, and articles are used only with nouns.
I had to hurry to catch the bus before it left the stop.
Stop dilly-dallying and make a decision about which movie we should watch tonight.
To make the sentence negative, add the word "not": You are not in a hurry.
"Please hurry and write your sentences," the teacher said.
hurry
Hurry is used as a verb in most cases. For example: To avoid being late, I had to hurry to my car and drive to work.
The adverb of hurry is hurriedly.An example sentence is: "she hurriedly rushed out the door to catch the bus".
hurry up, if not you will miss the bus
you can use 'rush' instead of 'hurry' in sentences.for eg-instead of "what is the hurry?" u can say "what is the rush for?"
Time is on the essence; hurry up!
The laggard student consistently turned in assignments late, causing their grades to suffer.