Ruminations.
Where does the word "rush" come from?
The verb "rush" comes from the Latinrecusare, "to decline or reject." The noun "rush," however, comes from Old Englishresc or risc, "a plant growing in marshy ground." The OED lists 87 different meanings for the word - 42 nouns, 41 verbs, 1 adjective, and 1 adverb (these numbers don't add up, but that's for the Oxford English Dictionary to explain). Obsolete meanings for the noun include "a robbery" and "a feast or party." Current meanings for the noun include "a type of plant; an onslaught; a surge; and a thick growth of hair." Current meanings for the verb include "to come suddenly into view; to collapse; to move with speed and force; to pressure a person into doing something; and to lavish attention on." The adjective means "hurried," and the adverb similarly means "with haste." The earliest written use of the noun is in 1380, in the manuscript known as Sir Ferumbras (Ashmolean manuscript #33). Links.
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