hustle
- IPA[ˈhəs(ə)l]
美式
- force (someone) to move hurriedly or unceremoniously in a specified direction;push roughly; jostle
- busy movement and activity;a fraud or swindle
verb: hustle, 3rd person present: hustles, gerund or present participle: hustling, past tense: hustled, past participle: hustled
noun: hustle, plural noun: hustles
- 釋義
- 相關詞
- 片語
動詞
- 1. force (someone) to move hurriedly or unceremoniously in a specified direction they hustled him into the back of a horse-drawn wagon
- ▪ push roughly; jostle they were hissed and hustled as they went in 同義詞
- ▪ hurry; bustle he had to retag second base and hustle back to first 同義詞
- 2. North American informal obtain by forceful action or persuasion the brothers headed to New York to try and hustle a record deal
- ▪ coerce or pressure someone into doing or choosing something don't be hustled into anything 同義詞
- ▪ sell aggressively he hustled his company's oil around the country
- ▪ obtain by illicit action; swindle; cheat Linda hustled money from men she met
- 3. North American informal engage in prostitution.
名詞
- 1. busy movement and activity the hustle and bustle of the big cities
- 2. North American informal a fraud or swindle the hustles being used to avoid the draft
- a part-time job or occupation undertaken in addition to one's regular employment: he started the blog in 2013 and has continued it as a side hustle
Oxford Dictionary
- a part-time job or occupation undertaken in addition to one's regular employment: he started the blog in 2013 and has continued it as a side hustle
Oxford American Dictionary
- move or act quickly
Oxford American Dictionary
- move or act quickly
Oxford American Dictionary
- move or act quickly
Oxford Dictionary
- move or act quickly
Oxford Dictionary
- 更多解釋
- IPA[ˈhʌsl]
英式
- push roughly; jostle: they were hissed and hustled as they went in
- a state of great activity: the hustle and bustle of the big cities
Oxford Dictionary