There are several words that can be used for rush, depending on on which meaning you are referring to.
1) If you are using rush to mean you had to hurry, I was running so late this morning I really had to hustle to make it to school on time.
2) You can use rush to describe a sensation; the new roller-coaster goes over 70 miles per/hour, I love the feeling of adrenaline surging through my head, what a rush!
3) The natural child birth class I taught at the hospital replaces the word contraction, with the word rush. Contractions make us think of pain, rush sounds like something we can get through quickly.
No, the noun 'Rush' (capital R) is a proper noun, the name of a specific person (Geoffrey Rush, Australian actor or Richard Rush, 8th US Attorney General). The noun 'rush' (lower case r) is a common noun, a general word for a quick and forceful movement; an act of doing something quickly; a type of marsh plant; a word for an rush of any kind. A common noun is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence. The word 'rush' (lower case r) is also a verb: rush, rushes, rushing, rushed.
Superb is another word for excellent. Superb is another word for excellent.
Another word for shake is "Tremble".
another word for unmade
What is another word for subsidiary?
rush or rushing
rush"Busy and active".
expedite
a haste, a rush, a scurry, an urgency
rush, speed, hasten, run, dash
No, rush does not have an adverb, and if it did the word might have been rushly but rushly is not a word.
I had to rush to my car.
I had to rush to get to school today.
The word "rush" can be either a verb or a noun, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
is it a adjective
rush - I rush to workrushes - She rushes to work.rushing - We are rushing to work.
No. The word rush is a verb (to hurry) or noun (a hurried state).