running fast and stuff like that
will hurry /will be hurrying/will have hurried/will have been hurrying.
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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.
We make mistakes when we are in a hurry.
I have to hurry if I'm going to make that meeting! Hurry hurry, rush rush!
"In a hurry" is a phrase, and the word "hurry" in this context functions as a noun.
hurry in Tagalog: bilis
"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.
The present tense of the word "hurry" is "hurries."
If they are fit to be done in a hurry, why not.
Yes, the word 'hurry' is both a noun and a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). The noun 'hurry' is a singular, common, abstract noun. Example uses: Noun: What's your hurry? Noun: The hurry of the trip was so exhausting. Verb: If you don't hurry, you'll miss the school bus.
festino = I hurry up. proverb: festina lente = hurry up slowly