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Discover LudwigThe phrase "air rush" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe the sensation or sound of air moving quickly, often in the context of wind or airflow.
Example: "As the plane took off, I felt the air rush past me, creating a thrilling sense of speed."
Alternatives: "wind rush" or "airflow surge".
Exact(8)
You can feel the air rush by you – it is an amazing feeling".
By afternoon, up near the top rung of his ladder, Tom felt the air rush out of his canopy of leaves.
I pull over and wind the window down, let the cold night air rush in, and through the falling snow I watch all the lights of the modern world, blinking out over Boston.
Perhaps not to be outdone, Lera Auerbach's 2013 opera The Blind calls on attendees to be blindfolded and led into the hall as gusts of cold air rush through the auditorium.
Like an airplane wing, the shower curtain moves, the Bernoulli backers say, because water from the showerhead accelerates air on one side, letting air rush in and move the curtain.
The standard, first popularized by Apple Computer in its Airport line of wireless products last year, is now being embraced so quickly that it is touching off a wireless "air rush" as start-up companies and telecommunication vendors vie to lock up valuable sites at airports, hotels and other public hot spots.
Similar(49)
Air rushed in.
The air rushing frigid around their ears.
Light and views and air rushed in from every direction.
The air rushed in her ears like water.
Bursts of cool air rushed through the space.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com