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  1. 7 de abr. de 2015 · 495 8 12 20. 1. Rush hour: A regular period of heavy traffic, especially at the beginning or end of a workday. It is an idiomatic expression that refers to a specific period that may last less but generally more than an hour. Rush hours suggest a number of these periods: I.e. ...during morning rush hours, that is the rush hour that you have ...

  2. 4 de dic. de 2018 · At some point in Middle English, another adverb was created, "on head". It meant "impetuously, rashly, unadvisedly". Flash forward to the beginning of Early Modern English and we finally see "on head" (and its new spelling, "ahead") being used to mean "in front of". But significantly, it was used both with and without "of":

  3. 3. I am looking for a conventional antonym for peak hour. As far as I've seen, the term off-peak hours is used. Still, to me this means any hour that is not the peak hour, which is not necessarily the hour with the least clients or activity in a business. Here is an example sentence:

  4. 25 de mar. de 2018 · Meaning according to Collins Dictionary: "at a time suitable to you"1. Another turn of phrase is (see this question and its comments for information about the use of this phrase): At a time of your choosing. Attribution. 1 "Definition of 'at Your Convenience'." At Your Convenience Definition and Meaning | Collins English Dictionary. Accessed ...

  5. 25 de ago. de 2016 · rush-hour traffic. And spent is defined as used, and unable to be used again. So does the sentence "I spent half an hour intraffic" mean "I was held up in traffic for half an hour"? (And am therefore delayed) Or is it the same as "I was driving in traffic for half an hour"

  6. 23 de ago. de 2017 · rush: to go somewhere very quickly, or to do something too quickly and without thinking carefully enough. Everyone rushed out into the street to see what was happening. Try to answer the questions calmly, without rushing. A police car rushed past. In a THESAURUS section for "rush" it defines/compares "hurry" and "rush" as follows:

  7. 6. As far as I know, there is no distinction made between air motion caused by natural means, air motion caused by mechanical means, and air motion experienced due to the observer being in motion while the air stands still; they're all "wind" or "breeze" or "gale" or "gust" or "zephyr" or "scirocco" or whatever other word suits the velocity of ...

  8. 4 de oct. de 2020 · 1. Something that happens unexpectedly could be either pleasant or unpleasant. If something happens with bad timing, it comes at a time when it causes the maximum distress or inconvenience. For instance, I had been waiting all summer for a date to move in to my present house. When a date was finally fixed, it was the day I was due to go on holiday!

  9. 19 de may. de 2020 · LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mayor Tom Bradley has unveiled a package of traffic reduction measures designed to punish those who contribute to rush-hour congestion. "This plan has the potential of a triple whammy," Bradley said Thursday. "The less traffic snarls we all sit in, the less exhaust we put in the air and the more energy we save."

  10. 16 de ene. de 2022 · In certain rare cases, it can link, not just main clauses, but also finite verb phrases, as in "He wanted to avoid the rush-hour so took the early train," and adjectives, as in "It was an untried, so rather risky, undertaking." Note that it can't join non-finite verb phrases, which is why, in the example in (2) above, the "and" is mandatory.