Let's hustle, we need to leave now.
We are about to hustle them out of their money.
When the child got tired of waiting, he hustled his way through the line.Do the hustle!I hate getting hustled through the store!I love the hustle and bustle of Christmas!
The Zulu word for "hustle" is "ukushukela."
Sure, here is a sentence using the word "isile": The isile of the forest provided a peaceful escape from the hustle and bustle of the city.
"Let's show some hustle!" "We need to hussle more."
Hustle usually means to hurry or bustle. Here are some sentences.Hustle along, we're going to be late!He will have to hustle to catch up to us.I'm going to hustle off and get to class.The hustle was also a disco dance craze back in the 1970's.
For a moment I thought I'd lost my friend amongst the hustle and bustle in the busy town centre.
What a lot of hustle and bustle!
if your working out w/ someone and their lacking, say, "Hey! Put some hustle in your muscle!"
Yes, I can think of three meanings for the word hustle. It can refer to hurrying, moving quickly. It can refer to defrauding someone. And there is also a dance called the Hustle (whether anyone still dances it I cannot say, but there is a song called "Do The Hustle" which has not disappeared from memory).
That is the correct spelling of the verb "to hustle" (to hurry, to push, or slang to swindle).
The root word for hustle is "hustle," which originated in the late 17th century in the sense of "to shake" or "to bustle." It evolved to mean "to obtain by energetic activity" in the mid-19th century.
Enthusiasm, eagerness, hustle