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1 rush
I 1. verb(to (make someone or something) hurry or go quickly: He rushed into the room; She rushed him to the doctor.) skynde seg, bringe i all hast, storme (inn)2. noun1) (a sudden quick movement: They made a rush for the door.) jag, rush2) (a hurry: I'm in a dreadful rush.) hast(verk)•II noun(a tall grass-like plant growing in or near water: They hid their boat in the rushes.) sivfart--------hast--------hastverk--------jag--------masIsubst. \/rʌʃ\/( om plantefamilien Juncaceae, særlig slekten Juncus) sivnot worth a rush ikke verdt fem sure sildIIsubst. \/rʌʃ\/1) rush, tilstrømning2) fremstorming, fremstyrt, anløp, anfall3) jag, mas, kjas4) hastverk, travelhet• what's all the rush?5) (frem)busing, fremstrømming, fossing, strøm6) ( om vind eller vann) brus(ing), sus(ing)7) (amer., hverdagslig) flittig oppvarting, stormkurtise8) ( militærvesen) storm, sprangvis fremrykkingadvance by rushes ( militærvesen) forflytte seg sprangvisa rush of sympathy en bølge av sympatibe in a rush ha det traveltcarry with a rush ( militærvesen) erobre\/ta med stormthe five o'clock rush ettermiddagsrushetgive somebody a big rush stormkurtisere noengold rush gullfebermake a rush styrte frem, komme stormende frem skynde segrush at fremstorming motrush on\/to\/into tilstrømning tilthere was a rush eller a rush took place det ble litt av et rush, folk strømmet tilIIIverb \/rʌʃ\/1) flette med siv2) bestrø med sivIVverb \/rʌʃ\/1) komme stormende, fare, styrte (seg), storme2) ( overført) kaste seg3) storme, jage i vei med, føre frem i all hast, bringe i all hast, kaste frem4) jage, haste, ile, mase• don't rush into anything!5) forsere, skynde på, drive på, mase på• don't rush me!6) fosse, bruse (frem), velle, strømme7) ( militærvesen og overført) storme, velle inn over, invadere, okkupere8) ( også overført) kaste seg over, angripe, gå løs på9) (amer., hverdagslig) oppvarte flittig• how much did they rush you for this?fools rush in (where angels fear to tread) dårer begir seg inn på områder som andre knapt tør nærme segrush a bill through trumfe igjennom et lovforslag, forsere behandlingen av et lovforslagrush and tear jage, haste, maserush an order through hurtigekspedere en bestillingrush at komme stormende mot, kaste seg over, fly på, storme frem motrush into kaste seg inn i, styrte inn irush into extremes la seg drive til ytterligheterrush into print fare til avisenerush off fare av sted få av sted i all hastrush (up)on kaste seg overrush one's fences ( overført) gå for fort framrush somebody for something flå noen for noerush somebody off one's feet bringe noen ut av fatning få noen til å løpe bena av segrush through ( om arbeid) skynde seg med, slurve med, fare over med harelabbrush to conclusions trekke forhastede slutninger -
2 rush
I noun(Bot.) Binse, dieII 1. noun1) (rapid moving forward)make a rush for something — sich auf etwas (Akk.) stürzen
the holiday rush — der [hektische] Urlaubsverkehr
2) (hurry) Eile, diea rush of blood [to the head] — (fig. coll.) eine [plötzliche] Anwandlung
4) (period of great activity) Hochbetrieb, der6) in pl. (Cinemat.) [Bild]muster; Musterkopien2. transitive verb1) (convey rapidly)rush somebody/something somewhere — jemanden/etwas auf schnellstem Wege irgendwohin bringen
rush through Parliament — im Parlament durchpeitschen (ugs. abwertend) [Gesetz]
2) (cause to act hastily)rush somebody into doing something — jemanden dazu drängen, etwas zu tun
she hates to be rushed — sie kann es nicht ausstehen, wenn sie sich [ab]hetzen muss
4) (Mil. or fig.): (charge) stürmen; überrumpeln [feindliche Gruppe]3. intransitive verb1) (move quickly) eilen; [Hund, Pferd:] laufenshe rushed into the room — sie stürzte ins Zimmer
rush through Customs/the exit — durch den Zoll/Ausgang stürmen
don't rush! — nur keine Eile!
3) (flow rapidly) stürzen4)Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/120684/rush_about">rush about- rush into- rush up* * *I 1. verb(to (make someone or something) hurry or go quickly: He rushed into the room; She rushed him to the doctor.) stürzen,treiben2. noun1) (a sudden quick movement: They made a rush for the door.) der Sturm2) (a hurry: I'm in a dreadful rush.) die Hetze•II noun(a tall grass-like plant growing in or near water: They hid their boat in the rushes.) die Binse* * *rush1[rʌʃ]\rush mat Binsenmatte frush2[rʌʃ]I. nslow down! what's the \rush? mach langsam! wozu die Eile?to be in a \rush in Eile sein, es eilig habento leave in a \rush sich akk eilig auf den Weg machen2. (rapid movement) Losstürzen nt, Losstürmen nt, Ansturm m ( for auf + akk); (press) Gedränge nt, Gewühl nt; (demand) lebhafter Andrang, stürmische [o rege] Nachfrageat the outbreak of the fire there was a mad \rush for the emergency exits als das Feuer ausbrach, stürmte alles wie wild auf die Notausgänge zuI hate driving during the afternoon \rush ich hasse das Autofahren im nachmittäglichen Verkehrsgewühlthere's been a \rush for tickets es gab eine stürmische Nachfrage nach Kartenthe Christmas \rush der Weihnachtstrubel\rush of customers Kundenandrang mthe memory of who he was came back to him with a \rush mit einem Schlag fiel ihm wieder ein, wer er warshe became light-headed as a result of a sudden \rush of blood to the head ihr wurde schwindlig, nachdem ihr auf einmal das Blut in den Kopf geschossen wara \rush of air ein Luftstoß ma \rush of dizziness ein Schwindelanfall ma \rush of sympathy eine Woge des Mitgefühlsa \rush of tears ein plötzlicher Tränenausbrucha \rush of water ein Wasserschwall m4. (migration)gold \rush Goldrausch mII. vi1. (hurry) eilen, hetzenstop \rushing! hör auf zu hetzen!she's \rushing to help the others sie eilt den anderen zu Hilfewe \rushed to buy tickets for the show wir besorgten uns umgehend Karten für die Showwe shouldn't \rush to blame them wir sollten sie nicht voreilig beschuldigen▪ to \rush about [or around] herumhetzen▪ to \rush in hineinstürmen, hineinstürzento \rush into sb's mind ( fig) jdm plötzlich in den Sinn kommen [o durch den Kopf schießen]▪ to \rush towards sb auf jdn zueilen [o zustürzen]to \rush up the hill/the stairs den Berg/die Treppe hinaufeilento \rush into sb's mind jdm plötzlich in den Sinn kommen [o durch den Kopf schießen2. (hurry into)▪ to \rush into sth decision, project etw überstürzen [o übereilen]we shouldn't \rush into things wir sollten die Dinge nicht überstürzento \rush into a marriage überstürzt heiratento \rush into a war einen Krieg vom Zaun brechen3. (in Am football) einen Lauf[spiel]angriff [o Durchbruchsversuch] unternehmenhe has \rushed for over 100 yards er hat den Ball über 100 Yards im Lauf nach vorn getragenIII. vt1. (send quickly)▪ to \rush sb/sth [to a place] jdn/etw schnell [an einen Ort] bringenshe was \rushed to hospital sie wurde auf schnellstem Weg ins Krankenhaus gebrachtthe United Nations has \rushed food to the famine zone die Vereinten Nationen haben eilends Lebensmittel in die Hungerregion geschickt2. (pressure)they tried to \rush me into joining sie versuchten, mich zu einem schnellen Beitritt zu bewegenhe \rushed her into marrying him er drängte sie zu einer schnellen Heiratdon't \rush me! dräng mich nicht!3. (do hurriedly)to \rush one's food [or supper] das Essen hinunterschlingen, hastig essento \rush a job eine Arbeit hastig [o in aller Eile] erledigenlet's not \rush things lass uns nichts überstürzenthe new government \rushed several bills through Parliament die neue Regierung peitschte mehrere Gesetzesvorlagen durch das Parlament4. (charge)▪ to \rush sth etw stürmento \rush the enemy's defences die feindlichen Verteidigungsstellungen stürmento \rush the stage auf die Bühne stürmen7.* * *I [rʌʃ]1. nthere was a rush of water —
a rush of blood to the head — Blutandrang m im Kopf
See:→ gold rushI had a rush to get here on time — ich musste ganz schön hetzen, um rechtzeitig hier zu sein
it all happened in such a rush — das ging alles so plötzlich
2. vi(= hurry) eilen; (stronger) hetzen, hasten; (= run) stürzen; (wind) brausen; (water) schießen, stürzen; (= make rushing noise) rauschenI rushed to her side — ich eilte an ihre Seite
I'm rushing to finish it — ich beeile mich, es fertig zu machen
don't rush, take your time — überstürzen Sie nichts, lassen Sie sich Zeit
to rush through (book) — hastig lesen; meal hastig essen; museum, town hetzen durch; work hastig erledigen
to rush past (person) — vorbeistürzen; (vehicle) vorbeischießen
to rush in/out/back etc — hinein-/hinaus-/zurückstürzen or -stürmen etc
or defense (US) (lit, fig) —
the blood rushed to his face —
3. vt1)they rushed more troops to the front —
they rushed him out (of the room) — sie brachten ihn eilends aus dem Zimmer
2) (= force to hurry) hetzen, drängendon't rush me! —
to rush sb into doing sth — jdn dazu treiben, etw überstürzt zu tun
you can't rush this sort of work — für solche Arbeit muss man sich (dat) Zeit lassen
5) (inf: charge exorbitantly) schröpfen (inf)IIn (BOT)Binse f* * *rush1 [rʌʃ]A v/i1. stürmen, jagen, rasen, stürzen:rush at sb auf jemanden losstürzen;rush in hereinstürzen, -stürmen;rush into certain death in den sicheren Tod rennen;rush into extremes ins Extrem verfallen;rush into marriage überstürzt heiraten;blood rushed to her face das Blut schoss ihr ins Gesicht;a) hetzen oder hasten durch,b) ein Buch etc hastig lesen,c) eine Mahlzeit hastig essen,2. dahinbrausen, -fegen (Wind)B v/t1. (an)treiben, drängen, hetzen:I refuse to be rushed ich lasse mich nicht drängen;rush sb to hospital auch jemanden mit Blaulicht ins Krankenhaus bringen3. eine Arbeit etc hastig erledigen:rush a bill (through) eine Gesetzesvorlage durchpeitschen4. überstürzen, -eilen, übers Knie brechen umg6. im Sturm nehmen (auch fig), erstürmen7. über ein Hindernis hinwegsetzen8. US sl mit Aufmerksamkeiten überhäufen, umwerben9. Br umg jemanden neppen (£5 um 5 Pfund):how much did they rush you for it? wie viel haben sie dir dafür abgeknöpft?C s1. (Vorwärts)Stürmen n, Dahinschießen n, -jagen n2. Brausen n (des Windes)3. Eile f:at a rush, on the rush umg in aller Eile, schnellstens;with a rush plötzlich;there’s no rush es hat keine Eile, es eilt nicht4. figb) (Massen-)Andrang mmake a rush for losstürzen auf (akk)5. MED (Blut)Andrang m6. figa) plötzlicher Ausbruch (of von Tränen etc)of von Mitleid etc)7. a) Drang m (der Geschäfte), Hetze f umgb) Hochbetrieb m, -druck mc) Überhäufung f (of mit Arbeit etc)8. SCHULE US (Wett)Kampf m9. pl FILM Schnellkopie fD adj1. eilig, dringend, Eil…2. geschäftig, Hochbetriebs…rush2 [rʌʃ]A s1. BOT Binse f2. koll Binsen pl3. ORN Binsenhuhn n4. fig Deut m:not worth a rush keinen Pfifferling wert umg;I don’t care a rush es ist mir völlig schnurz umgB adj Binsen…:rush-bottomed chair Binsenstuhl m* * *I noun(Bot.) Binse, dieII 1. nounmake a rush for something — sich auf etwas (Akk.) stürzen
the holiday rush — der [hektische] Urlaubsverkehr
2) (hurry) Eile, diebe in a [great] rush — in [großer] Eile sein; es [sehr] eilig haben
a rush of blood [to the head] — (fig. coll.) eine [plötzliche] Anwandlung
4) (period of great activity) Hochbetrieb, der5) (heavy demand) Ansturm, der (for, on auf + Akk.)6) in pl. (Cinemat.) [Bild]muster; Musterkopien2. transitive verbrush somebody/something somewhere — jemanden/etwas auf schnellstem Wege irgendwohin bringen
rush through Parliament — im Parlament durchpeitschen (ugs. abwertend) [Gesetz]
be rushed — (have to hurry) in Eile sein
rush somebody into doing something — jemanden dazu drängen, etwas zu tun
she hates to be rushed — sie kann es nicht ausstehen, wenn sie sich [ab]hetzen muss
3) (perform quickly) auf die Schnelle erledigen; (perform too quickly)4) (Mil. or fig.): (charge) stürmen; überrumpeln [feindliche Gruppe]3. intransitive verb1) (move quickly) eilen; [Hund, Pferd:] laufenrush through Customs/the exit — durch den Zoll/Ausgang stürmen
2) (hurry unduly) sich zu sehr beeilen3) (flow rapidly) stürzen4)Phrasal Verbs:- rush up* * *n.Andrang -¨e m.Eile -n f. v.drängen v.hetzen v.rasen v.stürzen v. -
3 rush
bot Binse f;\rush mat Binsenmatte f;slow down! what's the \rush? mach langsam! wozu die Eile?;to be in a \rush in Eile sein, es eilig haben;to leave in a \rush sich akk eilig auf den Weg machen2) ( rapid movement) Losstürzen nt, Losstürmen nt, Ansturm m ( for auf +akk); ( press) Gedränge nt, Gewühl nt ( demand) lebhafter Andrang, stürmische [o rege] Nachfrage;at the outbreak of the fire there was a mad \rush for the emergency exits als das Feuer ausbrach, stürmte alles wie wild auf die Notausgänge zu;I hate driving during the afternoon \rush ich hasse das Autofahren im nachmittäglichen Verkehrsgewühl;there's been a \rush for tickets es gab eine stürmische Nachfrage nach Karten;the Christmas \rush der Weihnachtstrubel;\rush of customers Kundenandrang m;to make a \rush at sb sich akk auf jdn stürzen;the memory of who he was came back to him with a \rush mit einem Schlag fiel ihm wieder ein, wer er war;she became light-headed as a result of a sudden \rush of blood to the head ihr wurde schwindlig, nachdem ihr auf einmal das Blut in den Kopf geschossen war;a \rush of air ein Luftstoß m;a \rush of dizziness ein Schwindelanfall m;a \rush of sympathy eine Woge des Mitgefühls;a \rush of tears ein plötzlicher Tränenausbruch;a \rush of water ein Wasserschwall m4) ( migration)gold \rush Goldrausch m1) ( hurry) eilen, hetzen;stop \rushing! hör auf zu hetzen!;she's \rushing to help the others sie eilt den anderen zu Hilfe;we \rushed to buy tickets for the show wir besorgten uns umgehend Karten für die Show;we shouldn't \rush to blame them wir sollten sie nicht voreilig beschuldigen;to \rush in hineinstürmen, hineinstürzen;to \rush out hinauseilen, hinausstürzen; water herausschießen;to \rush towards sb auf jdn zueilen [o zustürzen];to \rush up the hill/ the stairs den Berg/die Treppe hinaufeilen;to \rush into sb's mind jdm plötzlich in den Sinn kommen [o durch den Kopf schießen];2) ( hurry into)to \rush into sth decision, project etw überstürzen [o übereilen];we shouldn't \rush into things wir sollten die Dinge nicht überstürzen;to \rush into a marriage überstürzt heiraten;to \rush into a war einen Krieg vom Zaun brechenhe has \rushed for over 100 yards er hat den Ball über 100 Yards im Lauf nach vorn getragen vt1) ( send quickly)to \rush sb/sth [to a place] jdn/etw schnell [an einen Ort] bringen;she was \rushed to hospital sie wurde auf schnellstem Weg ins Krankenhaus gebracht;the United Nations has \rushed food to the famine zone die Vereinten Nationen haben eilends Lebensmittel in die Hungerregion geschickt2) ( pressure)they tried to \rush me into joining sie versuchten, mich zu einem schnellen Beitritt zu bewegen;he \rushed her into marrying him er drängte sie zu einer schnellen Heirat;don't \rush me! dräng mich nicht!3) ( do hurriedly)to \rush a job eine Arbeit hastig [o in aller Eile] erledigen;let's not \rush things lass uns nichts überstürzen;to \rush sth through [sth] etw schnell [durch etw akk] durchbringen;the new government \rushed several bills through Parliament die neue Regierung peitschte mehrere Gesetzesvorlagen durch das Parlament4) ( charge)to \rush sb sich akk auf jdn stürzen, über jdn herfallen;to \rush sth etw stürmen;to \rush the enemy's defences die feindlichen Verteidigungsstellungen stürmen;to \rush the stage auf die Bühne stürmenhow much did they \rush you for that? wie viel haben sie dir dafür abgeknöpft? ( fam)PHRASES:to [not] \rush one's fences ( Brit) die Sache [nicht] überstürzen -
4 Brindley, James
SUBJECT AREA: Canals[br]b. 1716 Tunstead, Derbyshire, Englandd. 27 September 1772 Turnhurst, Staffordshire, England[br]English canal engineer.[br]Born in a remote area and with no material advantages, Brindley followed casual rural labouring occupations until 1733, when he became apprenticed to Abraham Bennett of Macclesfield, a wheelwright and millwright. Though lacking basic education in reading and writing, he demonstrated his ability, partly through his photographic memory, to solve practical problems. This established his reputation, and after Bennett's death in 1742 he set up his own business at Leek as a millwright. His skill led to an invitation to solve the problem of mine drainage at Wet Earth Colliery, Clifton, near Manchester. He tunnelled 600 ft (183 m) through rock to provide a leat for driving a water-powered pump.Following work done on a pump on Earl Gower's estate at Trentham, Brindley's name was suggested as the engineer for the proposed canal for which the Duke of Bridge water (Francis Egerton) had obtained an Act in 1759. The Earl and the Duke were brothers-in-law, and the agents for the two estates were, in turn, the Gilbert brothers. The canal, later known as the Bridgewater Canal, was to be constructed to carry coal from the Duke's mines at Worsley into Manchester. Brindley advised on the details of its construction and recommended that it be carried across the river Irwell at Barton by means of an aqueduct. His proposals were accepted, and under his supervision the canal was constructed on a single level and opened in 1761. Brindley had also surveyed for Earl Gower a canal from the Potteries to Liverpool to carry pottery for export, and the signal success of the Bridgewater Canal ensured that the Trent and Mersey Canal would also be built. These undertakings were the start of Brindley's career as a canal engineer, and it was largely from his concepts that the canal system of the Midlands developed, following the natural contours rather than making cuttings and constructing large embankments. His canals are thus winding navigations unlike the later straight waterways, which were much easier to traverse. He also adopted the 7 ft (2.13 m) wide lock as a ruling dimension for all engineering features. For cheapness, he formed his canal tunnels without a towpath, which led to the notorious practice of legging the boats through the tunnels.Brindley surveyed a large number of projects and such was his reputation that virtually every proposal was submitted to him for his opinion. Included among these projects were the Staffordshire and Worcestershire, the Rochdale, the Birmingham network, the Droitwich, the Coventry and the Oxford canals. Although he was nominally in charge of each contract, much of the work was carried out by his assistants while he rushed from one undertaking to another to ensure that his orders were being carried out. He was nearly 50 when he married Anne Henshall, whose brother was also a canal engineer. His fees and salaries had made him very wealthy. He died in 1772 from a chill sustained when carrying out a survey of the Caldon Canal.[br]Further ReadingA.G.Banks and R.B.Schofield, 1968, Brindley at Wet Earth Colliery: An Engineering Study, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.S.E.Buckley, 1948, James Brindley, London: Harrap.JHB
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