hurry: [16] The earliest known occurrences of the verb hurry are in the plays of Shakespeare, who uses it quite frequently. This suggests that it may have been a word well known to him in his native West Midland dialect, but it is not clear whether it is identical with the horye that occurs in a 14th-century Middle English poem from the same general area. A possible relative is Middle High German hurren ‘move quickly’.
hurry (v.)
1590, first recorded in Shakespeare, who used it often; perhaps a variant of harry (v.), or perhaps a West Midlands sense of Middle English hurren "to vibrate rapidly, buzz," from Proto-Germanic *hurza "to move with haste" (cognates: Middle High German hurren "to whir, move fast," Old Swedish hurra "to whirl round"), which also perhaps is the root of hurl. Related: hurried; hurrying.
hurry (n.)
c. 1600, probably from hurry (v.).
实用例句
1. In the fifth line, read " hurry " for " harry " .
在第5行中将harry改为 hurry.
来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
2. Dave was in a hurry to get back to work.
戴夫急于回到工作岗位。
来自柯林斯例句
3. Petter saw no reason to hurry the divorce along.
彼得认为没有必要加速离婚进程。
来自柯林斯例句
4. Patrick often plays up when he knows I'm in a hurry.