rush one's fences - definitie. Wat is rush one's fences
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  • etymologie

Wat (wie) is rush one's fences - definitie

Drift fences
  • Stinnett]], for the Drift Fence

rush one's fences      
Brit.
act with undue haste.
Rush (video games)         
VIDEO GAMING STRATEGY OF MAKING AN EARLY ATTACK
Zerging; Rushdown; Zerg rush; OMG ZERG RUSH; Rushdown (game term); Zergling rush; Zerg guild; Zeolot rush; Zealot rush; Tank rush; Gatecrasher (Diablo 2); Zerg Rush; Hydra rush; Rush (computer gaming); Rushing (computer gaming); Zerg rushing; Tank Rushing; Four pool rush; Grunt rush; Rush (computer and video games); Tower rush; Goblin tactics; Alpha strike (gaming); Zerg-rush; Zerg rushed; Zerg-rushed; Rush (video gaming)
In video games, rushing or rushdown is a battle tactic similar to the blitzkrieg or the human wave attack tactics in real-world ground warfare, in which speed and surprise are used to overwhelm an enemy's ability to wage war, usually before the enemy is able to achieve an effective buildup of sizable defensive and/or expansionist capabilities.
Thomas Rush         
ENGLISH KNIGHT
Sir Thomas Rush; Rush, Thomas
Sir Thomas Rush (or Russhe) (by 1487 – June 1537), born in Sudbourne, Suffolk, England, was an English serjeant-at-arms who served Henry VII and Henry VIII and was knighted by the latter at the coronation of Anne Boleyn in 1533. He was also appointed High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1533.

Wikipedia

Drift fence

A drift fence is any long, continuous fence used to control the movement of animals in a particular open range, or to collect animals for research.

Drift fences were used in the Texas Panhandle from 1882 to 1887 to control "cattle drift"—the winter migration of livestock to warmer territory. Long sections of barbed wire fence were built by ranchers to keep the cattle from moving to the southern part of the state. This fence was disastrous for the animals during the winter of 1886-87. Deep snow covered the grasslands, and the fence prevented the herds from migrating to greener pastures. As a result, the cattle froze to death along the fences. Some 75 percent perished during the winter.