go on with the fast......moving things...move as fast as the day and time is running on.........
If they are fit to be done in a hurry, why not.
rush
"Nipped along" can mean to move quickly or briskly. It could refer to walking or running at a fast pace. It is often used to describe someone moving with urgency or in a hurry.
In a weird sense, the prophecy of the witches that Macbeth will be king does. It gets Lady Macbeth thinking that they should hurry things along.
well, hurry up or hurry up then or then hurry up the first is literally
Literally: We have hurry, so: We are in a hurry.
To "Hurry up" is to quicken, or speed up the pace of an action.
To "Hurry up" is to quicken, or speed up the pace of an action.
"Hurry up!"'Hurry up' (to one person).
Haste is a synonym for in a hurry. It begins with the letter h.
hurry
hurry up