hustle
hus·tle / ˈhəsəl/ • v. 1. [tr.] force (someone) to move hurriedly or unceremoniously in a specified direction: they hustled him into the back of a horse-drawn wagon. ∎ [tr.] push roughly; jostle: they were hissed and hustled as they went in. ∎ [intr.] hurry; bustle: he had to retag second base and hustle back to first.2. [tr.] inf. obtain by forceful action or persuasion: the brothers headed to New York to try and hustle a record deal. ∎ (hustle someone into) coerce or pressure someone into doing or choosing something: don't be hustled into anything. ∎ sell aggressively: he hustled his company's oil around the country. ∎ obtain by illicit action; swindle; cheat: Linda hustled money from men she met.3. [intr.] inf. engage in prostitution.• n. 1. busy movement and activity: the hustle and bustle of the big cities. ∎ energetic effort: he forced a turnover with his hustle, diving after a loose ball.2. inf. a fraud or swindle.PHRASES: hustle one's butt (or vulgar slang ass) inf. move or act quickly.