inrush

noun
/ˈɪnˌɹʌʃ//ˌɪnˈɹʌʃ/

Etymology

From in- + rush.

  1. derived from rehusser
  2. derived from russhen — “to force back
  3. derived from *(o)rewə- — “to drive, move, agitate
  4. derived from *rūsōną — “to be cruel, storm, rush
  5. derived from *rūskōną — “to rush, storm, be fierce, be cruel
  6. derived from ruschen — “to rush
  7. derived from *ḱers- — “to run, hurry
  8. inherited from *hurskijaną — “to startle, drive
  9. inherited from *hurskijan
  10. inherited from hrysċan — “to jolt, startle
  11. inherited from ruschen
  12. prefixed as inrush — “in + rush

Definitions

  1. A crowding or flooding in.

    • We found Pop Glossop in his pantry polishing silver, and put in our order. He seemed a little surprised at the inrush of such a multitude, but on learning that our tongues were hanging out obliged with a bottle of the best […]
  2. The initial flow of electricity into a component when it is switched on.

  3. To rush in.

    • The Ocean, ready to inrush upon them.

The neighborhood

Derived

inrushing

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for inrush. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA