English » Polish

I . rush1 [rʌʃ] N

1. rush no pl (hurry):

rush
to be in a rush
is there any rush for it?

2. rush no pl (fast movement):

rush
pęd m
rush of air
rush of blood

3. rush of feelings:

rush

4. rush ECON:

rush

5. rush no pl (busy period):

the Christmas rush
rush hours

II . rush1 [rʌʃ] VB intr

3. rush (do too quickly):

to rush into sth

III . rush1 [rʌʃ] VB trans

1. rush (hurry):

to rush sth

2. rush (take quickly):

to rush sb [somewhere]

3. rush (make hurry):

to rush sb [into doing sth]

4. rush (attack, charge):

to rush sb/sth

rush2 [rʌʃ] N (plant)

rush
sitowie nt

gold rush N HISTORY

rush out VB trans

rush out product:

rush out

rush through VB trans

rush through order, application:

rush through

rush hour N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
There are 12-15 different species of plants including "sphagnum" moss, heather, bell heather, crowberry, rosemary heather, cranberries, white beak rush and tue-cottongrass; a rare plant is cloudberry.
en.wikipedia.org
The rush up town to see the serials before the feature movie gave us many ideas for battle at the tall grass.
www.thetelegram.com
When the anticipated old lady does not appear at the event, they rush to her home.
en.wikipedia.org
It's a bit of a gold rush with the market opportunity opening.
www.nbr.co.nz
By the middle of the season, the control room was scaled down and relocated to a well-lit but smaller bunker rush room.
en.wikipedia.org
But as she would rush out, the doors would begin to close on her.
en.wikipedia.org
These compartments have softer and wider seat arrangements; however, standing in the first class car is common during rush hour.
en.wikipedia.org
In coastal areas, sea rush is common in saltmarsh breeding sites, with sedges and bur-reed dominant in somewhat less saline environments.
en.wikipedia.org
The varied pace assures that after a rush of events, she allows a few quiet pages about long-married life, the serene pleasure of going to sleep companionably in another's embrace.
www.smh.com.au
In the rush to get the word out about their new work, they oversell, mislead, or otherwise exaggerate the results of research.
www.vox.com

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