What's the difference between inroad and inrush?

Inroad


Definition:

  • (n.) The entrance of an enemy into a country with purposes of hostility; a sudden or desultory incursion or invasion; raid; encroachment.
  • (v. t.) To make an inroad into; to invade.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) That unit, he said, had made some inroads in tackling extremism in prisons.
  • (2) In spite of inroads made by CT, ultra-sonography, radionuclide scans, and other modalities, there is still diagnostic information that is best supplied by the IVU.
  • (3) This side will kill them, that side will kill them.” However, with the launch of their annual spring offensive, the Taliban has made recent inroads in several Afghan provinces.
  • (4) Responding to news of the Delta deal, which began to circulate on Thursday , Harry Breach, an analyst at Westhouse Securities, said the deal could help Rolls-Royce and Airbus make inroads into the American market.
  • (5) The poll also shows that while the public is increasingly fearful of deteriorating economic conditions, Labour is making only limited inroads as a result.
  • (6) We've made inroads into tackling it, but the key now is keeping up momentum.
  • (7) The devices I'd seen were already becoming popular in Asia, and now they're making serious inroads in other parts of the world, including America.
  • (8) The formal investigation could recommend that individual big six members separate their units that generate power from those units that sell it to households to try to make inroads into their 95% market share.
  • (9) 5.40pm BST 40 min : Uruguay have the ball but, faced with diligent and numerous Italians, they can't make any inroads.
  • (10) As an example, it is an accepted fact that dentistry more than any other profession has made serious inroads into putting itself out of business through research.
  • (11) Ermir Lanjani, making inroads with his persistence on the left, saw a shot deflect off Patrice Evra.
  • (12) Therefore, while significant inroads have been made in understanding the initial events, we still do not fully understand all the processes involved in the proliferation of arterial intimal lesions.
  • (13) Real now have half the time to do the job they were make any inroads into in the first period.
  • (14) He added: “What we are saying is that there is a series of steps that we can take, some quite quickly, that over a couple of years should make real inroads into the numbers of preventable deaths.” A government spokesman said: “It is vital that all services – NHS , prisons and the police – are honest and open when things go wrong and work with families and staff to prevent further tragedies.
  • (15) The results indicated that alteplase has made dramatic inroads, being used exclusively in 14.6% of the hospitals; in 64% of the hospitals both alteplase and streptokinase were on the formulary.
  • (16) As China makes economic and developmental inroads into Africa it may only be a matter of time before Mauritania's largely untapped resources come into focus.
  • (17) The volume levels among the crowd at the bottom of the 3.5km run at Rosa Khutor then rose appreciably as Miller made inroads on Mayer's time at the top of the course.
  • (18) They are looking for equality, they want respect from the world’s space community.” To that end, China’s biggest inroad has been made with the ESA through the space science programme.
  • (19) No school or teacher can be expected to pick up something like preventing violence against women and their children and make inroads in entrenched societal issues like gender inequality – the key driver of violence against women.
  • (20) Meanwhile they have seen their rivals make serious inroads on the summer transfer market.

Inrush


Definition:

  • (n.) A rush inwards; as, the inrush of the tide.
  • (v. i.) To rush in.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It was a great claim by the keeper at the feet of the inrushing striker, no more, no less.
  • (2) Opening of the cage's feed and water ports causes an inrush of high velocity air which prevents back-migration of aerosols and permits feeding and watering while eliminating need for chemical vapor decontamination.
  • (3) Nevertheless the demonstration was of an imposing character and the inrush of visitors to the city immense.
  • (4) His cross is met by the head of the inrushing Evra, making good from the left wing.
  • (5) Afghanistan's got to take more responsibility for its own affairs, but Pakistan's got to be involved more directly in the battle against this terrorist inrush into Afghanistan."
  • (6) With the inrush of new data the recent clear division of neural, hormonal and immunological regulation has been seriously complicated.

Words possibly related to "inrush"