Have you ever slowed down for a moment, however brief, and given a quick thought to the word fast? It might seem counterintuitive, but hear us out!
The word fast is a fascinating word. It has many different meanings, from the one you’re most familiar with (“quick, swift”), to others that you may not even know (“a chain or rope for mooring a vessel”). Beyond all the different meanings, fast also functions as many different parts of speech: it can be an adjective, adverb, noun, and even a verb. In fact, because it’s an adjective and an adverb, you don’t have to add -ly to the end to make it an adverb.
Fun fact: fastly once was the adverb form of fast, dating all the way back to Old English, but the form lost its lexical speed, as it were, a few centuries back. Fastly today is considered a nonstandard adverbial form of fast.
The word fast is an old one. It comes from the Old English fæst, meaning “firm.” By around the 1200s, the word fast extended to include a sense of “running hard,” which gave rise to the word’s meanings of “quickly” and “swiftly.” And, over the next 800 years, we continued to add and subtract meanings from the word fast.
Now that we’ve quickly given you a speedy history of the word, you might be hankering for terms about speed with a little more oomph than plain ol’ fast. Well, you’re in luck. We’ve lined up some of our favorite synonyms of fast at the starting line, and we are off to the races!