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The verb of rushes is rush. As in "to rush someone or something".
Yes, "rush" is an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of something moving quickly or forcefully.
Yes, "rush" is the present tense of "rushed." The verb "to rush" means to hurry, to do something quickly. For example: When I know I am late to catch the bus, I rush to get out of the house.
I/you/we/they rush. He/she/it rushes.
I had to rush to my car.
The verb of rushes is rush. As in "to rush someone or something".
I didn't know that Mount Rushmore could be "crated" - Do they have something that size at Crate & Barrel. It'll be a barrel of laughs seeing somebody try to crate Mount Rushmore though! They'll have to rush more crates to them, I guess!
Yes, "rush" is an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of something moving quickly or forcefully.
When you are doing something that is dangerous or hikes your temper. For ex: while in a boxing match players can have an adrenalin rush or when a dog is chasing you, you can have an adrenalin rush
Upbeat 70s tempo, 'hit me with a head rush, I said', something something, 'to make my head rush' Might help.
There is a Malayalam word "tickuka" which means make jam or rush in a queue or in a gruop.if some body say "tickunnh" same pronounciation as ticking it means somebody is making jam or rush.
The California Gold Rush
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Whether all colleges/ universities in USA accept rush shipping of SAT scores? whether credit card payment can be made in USA for the student registering from Kenya?
go get a life you loony tick go find something entertainment or something
Yes, "rush" is the present tense of "rushed." The verb "to rush" means to hurry, to do something quickly. For example: When I know I am late to catch the bus, I rush to get out of the house.
If you try something else and get in you dont have to rush