Indistinguishable in speech, the words hurtle and hurdle can be a confusing pair.
Hurtle is a verb with two meanings: "to move rapidly or forcefully," as in "The stone was hurtling through the air," and "to hurl or fling," as in "I hurtled the stone into the air." Note that the first use is intransitive: the stone isn't hurtling anything; it itself is simply hurtling. The second use is transitive: something was hurtled—in this case, a stone.
Hurdle is both a noun and a verb. As a noun, its most common meanings have to do with barriers: the ones that runners leap over, and the metaphorical extension of these, the figurative barriers and obstacles we try to similarly overcome. The verb hurdle has two meanings, and they are directly related to these. It can mean "to leap over especially while running," as in "She hurdled the fence," and it can mean "to overcome or surmount," as in "They've had to hurdle significant financial obstacles." The verb hurdle is always transitive; that is, there's always a thing being hurdled, whether it be a physical obstacle or a metaphorical one.
Noun
He won a medal in the high hurdles.
The company faces severe financial hurdles this year. Verb
The horse hurdled the fence.
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Noun
The timeline for commercial production remains uncertain and subject to indefinite delays due to technical, financial, and regulatory hurdles.—Kevin Green, MSNBC Newsweek, 5 Aug. 2025 Below, members of Forbes Technology Council reveal common hurdles teams face when scaling production AI—and share practical strategies for overcoming them.—Expert Panel®, Forbes.com, 5 Aug. 2025
Verb
In the legal industry and courts system where trust in what one sees and hears is paramount, the notion of AI hurdling society into a state where everything is questionable, and where even real media can be dismissed as AI, is especially destabilizing.—Sage Lazzaro, Fortune, 23 July 2025 There was the diminutive Puck, whose tiny body could hurdle through foes like a bowling ball, and Sasquatch, the scientist Walter Langkowski who transformed into a Hulk-like mythical Great Beast of the North with but a thought.—Frederick Melo, Twin Cities, 10 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for hurdle
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English hurdel, from Old English hyrdel; akin to Old High German hurt hurdle, Latin cratis wickerwork, hurdle
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
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