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Haste   /heɪst/   Listen
noun
Haste  n.  
1.
Celerity of motion; speed; swiftness; dispatch; expedition; applied only to voluntary beings, as men and other animals. "The king's business required haste."
2.
The state of being urged or pressed by business; hurry; urgency; sudden excitement of feeling or passion; precipitance; vehemence. "I said in my haste, All men are liars."
To make haste, to hasten.
Synonyms: Speed; quickness; nimbleness; swiftness; expedition; dispatch; hurry; precipitance; vehemence; precipitation. Haste, Hurry, Speed, Dispatch. Haste denotes quickness of action and a strong desire for getting on; hurry includes a confusion and want of collected thought not implied in haste; speed denotes the actual progress which is made; dispatch, the promptitude and rapidity with which things are done. A man may properly be in haste, but never in a hurry. Speed usually secures dispatch.



verb
Haste  v. t. & v. i.  (past & past part. hasted; pres. part. hasting)  To hasten; to hurry. (Archaic) "I 'll haste the writer." "They were troubled and hasted away."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Haste" Quotes from Famous Books



... was a joyous bustle surrounding the boat, which even imparted something of the same character to the waterfall in its tumult, and the restless grey waves; the young men laughed and shouted, the lasses laughed, and the elder folks seemed to be in a bustle to be away. I remember well with what haste the mistress of the house where we were ran up to seek after her child, and seeing us, how anxiously and kindly she inquired how we had fared, if we had had a good fire, had been well waited upon, etc. etc. All this in three minutes—for the boatman had another party to bring from the other ...
— Recollections of a Tour Made in Scotland A.D. 1803 • Dorothy Wordsworth

... shell with shouts and calls and excited voices. Restlessness and nervous excitement, nervous hilarity were in the air. There was a sense of electric surcharge everywhere, frictional, a neurasthenic haste for excitement. ...
— Aaron's Rod • D. H. Lawrence

... time the oldest Being lives, Nor has Longevity one hour to waste; Life's duties are proportion'd to the haste With which it fleets away;—each day receives Its task, that if neglected, surely gives The morrow double toil.—Ye, who have pass'd In idle sport the days that fled so fast, Days, that nor Grief recalls, nor Care retrieves, At ...
— Original sonnets on various subjects; and odes paraphrased from Horace • Anna Seward

... my watch. It was eight o'clock, and school should begin at nine. Yet the occasion witnessed no feverish display of haste on my part, I saw that the difficulties which I was destined to endure in the Performance of my toilet that morning called either for philosophy or madness. ...
— Cape Cod Folks • Sarah P. McLean Greene

... civilized? Had not she, too, spent her life upon a man, and that man a wolf's-head and a landless outlaw, more utterly than Godiva could ever have spent hers on one who lived lapped in luxury and wealth and power? Torfrida had done her best, and she had failed, or at least fancied in her haste ...
— Hereward, The Last of the English • Charles Kingsley


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