0 present participle of hustle
1 to make someone move quickly by pushing or pulling them along:
After giving his speech, Johnson was hustled out of the hall by bodyguards.
2 to try to persuade someone, especially to buy something, often illegally:
Therefore, it allows, as it has done on this occasion, delaying tactics rather than hustling tactics.
There was no rational ground for all this hustling.
I have described it as a hustling measure.
That is combined with a somewhat low grade of physical and hustling efficiency.
We should take more time because no one is hustling us.
For that, men will keep hustling from the crack of dawn until after day is done.
At one stage the gangster got hold of his victim and was hustling him from one place to another.
Also, now that there is to be a right of appeal in each case there can be no question of hustling them out of the country.