hustle

  • 11hustle — index haste, hasten, jostle (bump into), race Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 12hustle — (izg. hȁsl) m DEFINICIJA glazb. ples udvoje 1970 ih ETIMOLOGIJA engl.: gužva, vreva …

    Hrvatski jezični portal

  • 13hustle — [v] hurry; work hurriedly apply oneself, be conscientious, bulldoze*, bustle, elbow, fly, force, haste, hasten, hotfoot*, impel, jog, press, push, race, rush, shove, speed, thrust, use elbow grease*; concepts 91,150 Ant. dally, delay,… …

    New thesaurus

  • 14hustle — I UK [ˈhʌs(ə)l] / US verb Word forms hustle : present tense I/you/we/they hustle he/she/it hustles present participle hustling past tense hustled past participle hustled 1) [transitive] to make someone go quickly where you want them to go, or to… …

    English dictionary

  • 15hustle — f“hasl] 1. in. to move rapidly; to hurry. □ Come on, hustle, you guys. □ It’s late. I’ve got to hustle. 2. n. hurried movement; confusion. □ All the hustle and confusion made it hard to concentrate. □ …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 16Hustle — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Hustle peut faire référence à : Hustle, un film américain de Robert Aldrich sorti en 1975 ; Hustle, un téléfilm de 2004 ; Hustle, une série …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 17Hustle — Hus|tle auch: Hust|le 〈[hʌ̣s(ə)l] m. 6; Mus.〉 in Amerika entstandener Gesellschaftstanz, der paarweise (bes. in Diskotheken) getanzt wird [engl., eigtl. „Gedränge, Eile“] * * * Hus|tle [hʌsl], der; [s], s [engl. hustle = Gedränge, Gewühl]: a)… …

    Universal-Lexikon

  • 18hustle — hus|tle1 [ hʌsl ] verb 1. ) transitive to make someone go quickly where you want them to go or do what you want them to do: As soon as he arrived in the country, he was hustled off to prison. She d been hustled into selling the house too quickly …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 19hustle — {{11}}hustle (n.) pushing activity; activity in the interest of success, 1891, Amer.Eng., from HUSTLE (Cf. hustle) (v.); earlier it meant a shaking together (1715). Sense of illegal business activity is by 1963, Amer.Eng. As a name of a popular… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 20hustle — [[t]hʌ̱s(ə)l[/t]] hustles, hustling, hustled 1) VERB If you hustle someone, you try to make them go somewhere or do something quickly, for example by pulling or pushing them along. [V n prep/adv] The guards hustled Harry out of the car... [V n… …

    English dictionary