- - get a move on, if you're shakespeare
- - Move fast, like a cheetah?
- - Move hastily, old-style
- - Really move it
- - Move quickly, anciently
- - Move in a hurry, quaintly
- - Go hastily
- - Get a move on and how
- - Move it, quaintly
- - Put a move on
- - Move it, old-style
- - Move apace
- - Move along quickly
- - Move it along quickly
- - Shakespeare's "Move it!"
- - Get a move on, quaintly
- - Move quickly, quaintly
- - Move hastily
- - "Move out!"
- - Move briskly
- - Really move
- - Move hurriedly.
- - Move it along
- - "Get a move on!"
- - Move fast
- - Move quickly
- - 'Move it!'
- - Go quickly, for poets
- - Hurry up, coming from lecturer
- - Hasten to get out of Galashiels
- - Hurry some thieves
- - in the race i had to hurry back
- - He and I arrange to hasten forth
- - "Hurry up!" in the olden days
- - "hurry!" in shakespeare
- - Shake a leg, in Shakespeare
- - 'Hasten', in chiefly poetic usage
- - to go quickly, as shakespeare might put it
- - hurry, to the bard
- - hasten from the chief
- - Hasten or go quickly
- - Make haste or cause to go quickly
- - rush, old-style
- - Archaic "Go quickly"
- - Hurry from thieves
- - go quickly at some distance from the ground, we hear
- - To hasten
- - Get going fast
- - Word that means the same thing if you say "-tail it" at the tail end
- - Try to get to the church on time
- - Skeddaddle
- - Macbeth's "hurry"
- - Hasten, old-style
- - Go with speed
- - Go quickly, archaically
- - Get shaking
- - Floor it, archaically
- - Festinate
- - "Make tracks, Ophelia!"
- - Lose no time
- - Not dawdle
- - PUSH on
- - Hasten away
- - Zip along
- - Wagon-train cry
- - Skater of cinema
- - Rush-rush.
- - Hustle, quaintly
- - Hurry, to Shakespeare
- - Scurry, old-style
- - Go fast, quaintly
- - Go like all get-out
- - "... .... you home to dinner": Shak
- - Hurry, quaintly
- - Go quickly, old-style
- - Run, old-style
- - Shake a leg, quaintly
- - Hurry, old-style
- - Depart in haste
- - Get going quickly
- - Get along quickly
- - Quickly get moving
- - Go quickly, quaintly
- - How Juliet said "speed"
- - Get going, old-style
- - Hurry along
- - Rush along
- - Make tracks, old-style
- - Go in haste
- - '...... thee to hell for shame': 'Richard III'
- - Step on it, quaintly
- - Hurry, of old
- - Go with great haste
- - Make haste, quaintly
- - Show celerity
- - Rush off
- - Go quickly, to Shakespeare
- - Tear, quaintly
- - Hurry away
- - Step on it, old-style
- - Hotfoot it, old-style
- - Speed along
- - Go like the wind
- - Make great haste
- - Quicken the pace
- - Go in a hurry
- - Bolt, back in the day
- - Scamper and scurry
- - Stop dawdling, quaintly
- - "Scram!," once
- - Go apace
- - Not dally
- - What "thee" often follows in Shakespeare
- - Use speed
- - Get one's rear in gear
- - Zip, old-style
- - Hightail it, old-style
- - Rush, quaintly
- - Pick up the pace, old-style
- - Don't dawdle
- - "...... you to horse": Macbeth
- - Belt along
- - "Giddyup!"
- - Pick up the pace, once
- - Waste no time
- - Go rapidly
- - Waste not a moment
- - Go fast
- - Make haste
- - Dash off
- - 'Pick up the pace!'
- - Get cracking
- - Flee quickly
- - Hotfoot it
- - Hasten
- - Put the pedal to the metal
- - Take off in a hurry
- - Scurry
- - .... fly
- - Leave quickly
- - Take off
- - Bolt
- - Make tracks?
- - Floor it
- - Go quickly
- - Posthaste
- - Not square
- - Run like heck
- - Race
- - Run like the wind
- - Get going
- - Get the lead out?
- - Hustle
- - Run
- - Tear
- - Hurry
- - Rush
- - Scoot
- - Gallop
- - Skedaddle
- - Hightail it
- - Go swiftly
- - "Get moving!"
- - 'Shake a leg!'
- - "Hop to it!"
- - "Step on it!"
- - Speed
- - Zip
- - go quickly on a trip, we hear
- - one is surrounded by high explosive - hurry!
- - Speed sounds high!
- - hurry, once
- - Hurry up and listen to a salutation
- - Hurry to express a greeting
- [ Edit ]
- [ Other definitions ]