˜yÐÄvlog

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View synonyms for

hastily

[ heyst-l-ee ]

adverb

  1. with haste; rapidly; speedily:

    Late one snowy night in Maryland, moving crews hastily loaded a line of vans and, under cover of darkness, departed the city.

  2. without sufficient care or attention:

    This book feels far less potent, and far more hastily written, than the earlier work.

  3. unnecessarily quickly or rashly; impetuously:

    Six months earlier, she had hastily married a former high school classmate.



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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • ³Ü²Ô·³ó²¹²õ³Ù·¾±Â·±ô²â adverb
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of hastily1

First recorded in 1275–1325; hasty ( def ) + -ly
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Italy's Giorgia Meloni – who until Wednesday seemed more reluctant than others to retaliate in kind against the US – cleared her diary and hastily summoned ministers and business leaders to an emergency summit.

From

District Judge James Boasberg convened a hastily arranged hearing in response to an emergency lawsuit brought on behalf of five Venezuelan men who feared they would be deported to El Salvador.

From

Tom Welsh was drafted in from the Loughborough Academy as a short-term hire for Indian Wells, only for Vladimir Platenik to usurp him by arriving in California for a hastily arranged trial.

From

On the same trip, Lever also played in the very first one-day international, a hastily arranged 40-over match between England and Australia when the third Test in Melbourne was washed out.

From

And like the community’s morel mushrooms that seem to grow well over shallow, hastily dug graves, there’s a sense of mulchy inevitability about it.

From

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More About Hastily

What doesÌýhastily mean?

Hastily means rashly or too quickly and often carelessly.

The related adjective hasty most commonly means too fast and often careless.

The noun haste most commonly refers to urgency, such as in completing a task. Haste can also be used as another word for speed or swiftness. But haste also commonly means urgency or speed that is careless or reckless. This is how the word is used in the expression haste makes waste, which means that rushing things leads to mistakes. This is how hasty and hastily are most commonly used.

Doing things hastily is thought to lead to mistakes. Making a decision hastily is making it too quickly, often leading to negative consequences.

Hastily can also mean speedily, as in We packed up hastily and left as quickly as we could.Ìý

Example: Don’t make big decisions hastily—you should always take some time to think about them.

Where doesÌýhastily come from?

The first records of the word hastily come from around 1300. The noun haste is related to the English ³óæ²õ³Ù, “violence,†the Old Norse heifst, “hatred,†the Gothic haifsts, “quarrel,†and the Old High German heisti, “powerful.†The suffix -ly is used to form adverbs (the y in hasty is changed to an i in hastily, which is a spelling convention used in other adverbs whose base adjectives end in y, such as happily).

Hastily is most often used in a negative way. Most of the time, it implies that something was simply done too quickly, leading to mistakes. The opposite of doing something hastily is taking your time.

Did you know ... ?

What are some other forms related to hastily?

What are some synonyms for hastily?

What are some words that share a root or word element with hastily?Ìý

What are some words that often get used in discussing hastily?

How isÌýhastily used in real life?

Hastily is most commonly used in a negative way to imply that something has been done too quickly and in a careless way.

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Try usingÌýhastily!

Which of the following words is NOT a synonym of hastily?

A. rashly
B. carelessly
C. hurriedly
D. calmly

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