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Meanings of
surge
in English
Catalan
pujada
Spanish
subida
Back to the meaning
A sudden forceful flow.
rush
spate
upsurge
Catalan
pujada
Catalan
remuntar
Spanish
remontar
Back to the meaning
Rise rapidly.
zoom
soar
soar up
soar upwards
Catalan
remuntar
Synonyms
Examples for "
rush
"
rush
spate
upsurge
Examples for "
rush
"
1
When he reached the landing, however, he heard a
rush
of water.
2
As investors
rush
into frontier markets, analysts suggest careful selection among countries.
3
But in Ireland, it's a
rush
to work, that's the wrong way.
4
Fraud occurs in the
rush
of business; but it is the exception.
5
That exhilarating
rush
of power was gone; now I felt completely drained.
1
It also flagged a
spate
of store openings in Europe and China.
2
The deal follows a
spate
of other recent cross-border law firm mergers.
3
Private equity-owned insurance brokerages saw a
spate
of deals in recent years.
4
Brazil has suffered a
spate
of partisan violence during the polarized campaign.
5
REUTERS: What's driving the recent
spate
of bankruptcy filings by restaurant companies?
1
Controlling this inflationary
upsurge
required stratospheric interest rates and an overvalued currency.
2
Despite the
upsurge
in economic growth in 2014, Champagne consumption dropped again.
3
There is an
upsurge
of influence of Italian-Americans in both political parties.
4
Lex swallowed a sudden
upsurge
of bile, but held out her hand.
5
In the
upsurge
of relief that buoyed Complain, he seized Vyann's hand.
Portuguese
vaga
Spanish
oleada
Back to the meaning
A large sea wave.
billow
Portuguese
vaga
Catalan
onejar
Back to the meaning
Rise and move, as in waves or billows.
heave
Catalan
onejar
Other meanings for "surge"
Usage of
surge
in English
1
Public health authorities said that event contributed to a
surge
in cases.
2
The
surge
forced the government to introduce new cooling measures in October.
3
But in recent years, the state has seen a
surge
in tourism.
4
Indonesia has suffered a
surge
in human cases this year, baffling officials.
5
VIOLENCE A FACTOR A
surge
in recent violence could influence voter preferences.
6
However, with great artistic acclaim and value comes a
surge
in commercialization.
7
A
surge
in arrivals by sea has left Italy and Greece struggling.
8
This year also saw a
surge
in support for his 'Four Canzonas'.
9
The much-debated
surge
may have reduced violence and American casualties in Iraq.
10
This growing supply
surge
has not yet affected the refined copper market.
11
He's just one case in a new
surge
of infections across Russia.
12
The
surge
in interest extends beyond political debate over cost and coverage.
13
A
surge
in killings there last year forced mass displacements of people.
14
Nicole felt her heart rate
surge
as she listened to the question.
15
This combination of factors has seen its popularity
surge
in recent years.
16
The
surge
was almost 100 cases higher than figures recorded on Saturday.
Other examples for "surge"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term
surge
Noun
Singular
Verb
Indicative · Present
Frequent collocations
feel a surge
recent surge
sudden surge
late surge
surge to
More collocations
Translations for
surge
Catalan
pujada
remuntar
onejar
ondular
Spanish
subida
remontar
oleada
Portuguese
vaga
onda
vagalhão
Surge
through the time
Surge
across language varieties
Australia
Common
South Africa
Common
New Zealand
Common
More variants