The song is called "Santa Baby."
"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.
Hurry up! Don't dilly-dally we are in a hurry.
Santa Baby/Just slip a sable under the tree for me/Been an awful good girl/Santa Baby/So hurry down the chimney tonight Santa Baby/A 54 convertable too, light blue/i'll wait up for you dea/Santa Baby/So hurry down the chimney tonight Santa Baby/I want a yacht and really that's not a lot/Been an angel all year/Santa Baby/So hurry down the chimney tonight Santa Baby/One little thing i really do need the deed/To a platinum mine/Santa Baby/So hurry down the chimney tonight Santa Cutie/And fill my stokcing with a duplex and cheques/sign your x on the line/Santa Cutie/So hurry down the chimney tonight Santa Baby/Forgot to mention one little thing a ring/i don't mean on the phone/Santa Baby/So hurry down the chimney tonight
Stephen W. Hurry has written: 'The microstructure of cells' -- subject(s): Atlases, Cells, Cytology
Yes, "Hurry up." is a sentence fragment because it lacks a subject. It is a command rather than a complete sentence.
Example sentence - He left in a hurry, suggesting he could be guilty of the crime as well.
The Sucker Free Awards are on MTV2 TONIGHT at 11PM so hurry!! But they will air again on 12/7 at 10PM on MTV2
will hurry /will be hurrying/will have hurried/will have been hurrying.
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We make mistakes when we are in a hurry.
The word hurry is both a noun and a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). Example uses: Noun: She left in a hurry. Verb: You must hurry to catch that flight.
I have to hurry if I'm going to make that meeting! Hurry hurry, rush rush!