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hurtle
[ hur-tl ]
verb (used without object)
- to rush violently; move with great speed:
The car hurtled down the highway.
Synonyms: , , , ,
- to move or go noisily or resoundingly, as with violent or rapid motion:
The sound was deafening, as tons of snow hurtled down the mountain.
- Archaic. to strike together or against something; collide.
verb (used with object)
- to drive violently; fling; dash.
- Archaic. to dash against; collide with.
noun
- Archaic. clash; collision; shock; clatter.
hurtle
/ ˈ³óɜ˳ÙÉ™±ô /
verb
- to project or be projected very quickly, noisily, or violently
- rare.intr to collide or crash
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of hurtle1
Example Sentences
What he really did not bargain for was the Old Trafford side hurtling backwards at such an alarming rate.
A missile launcher sends a cloud of brown dust into the air as it hurtles across a field towards the firing line.
"It seems as if we're hurtling back in time," she told me.
We come to champion her as the streamlined narrative hurtles toward its shock finale.
Sarah Street, who heroically performed the work at a hurtling pace, confirmed for me that coherent narrative sense wasn’t what Beckett was aiming for.
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