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haste
[heyst]
noun
swiftness of motion; speed; celerity.
He performed his task with great haste. They felt the need for haste.
Antonyms: slothurgent need of quick action; a hurry or rush.
to be in haste to get ahead in the world.
unnecessarily quick action; thoughtless, rash, or undue speed.
Haste makes waste.
Synonyms: precipitation, precipitancy
verb (used with or without object)
Archaic., to hasten.
haste
/ heɪst /
noun
speed, esp in an action; swiftness; rapidity
the act of hurrying in a careless or rash manner
a necessity for hurrying; urgency
to hurry; rush
verb
a poetic word for hasten
Other Word Forms
- hasteful adjective
- hastefully adverb
- hasteless adjective
- hastelessness noun
- unhasted adjective
- unhasting adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of haste1
Word History and Origins
Origin of haste1
Idioms and Phrases
make haste, to act or go with speed; hurry.
She made haste to tell the president the good news.
More idioms and phrases containing haste
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
He said that while there was a need for some regulation in the industry, the law was introduced in haste and without consultation.
The ECI says the drive targets duplicate and deceased voters, but critics say its haste has disenfranchised many, especially migrants and minorities.
Hundreds of workers have fled overnight - abandoning jobs, homes and, in some cases, even families in their haste to escape.
But in a move implemented in haste earlier this month and criticised by human rights lawyers, the government has over-ridden that principle for the next three months at least.
In my haste, I tripped on the carpet in my heels and rolled my ankle.
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When To Use
Haste most commonly refers to urgency, such as in completing a task.It can also be used as another word for speed or swiftness, as in We have to move with haste if we want to make it on time. The phrase make haste means to move quickly, hurry up, or rush.Often, haste means urgency or speed that is careless or reckless. This is how the word is used in the expression haste makes waste, which means that rushing things leads to mistakes.The adjective form hasty is most often used in this sense—a hasty decision is one that is thought to have been made too quickly, perhaps leading to negative consequences. The adverb form is hastily.The verb hasten means to go faster or cause to go faster, as in We need to hasten our efforts.Example: In my haste to finish the project, I forgot to put my name on it.
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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