rycka

Etymology
,, from , from. .

Verb

 * 1) to yank, to jerk, to pull quickly
 * 2)  to twitch (of (part of) the body)
 * 3)  to move (quickly, with a purpose – see also )
 * 4)  to suddenly increase one's speed; to make a dash
 * 5)  to pull away, to pull ahead (move into the lead or increase one's lead (move (further) away from competitors), as a consequence of increasing one's speed)
 * 1)  to twitch (of (part of) the body)
 * 2)  to move (quickly, with a purpose – see also )
 * 3)  to suddenly increase one's speed; to make a dash
 * 4)  to pull away, to pull ahead (move into the lead or increase one's lead (move (further) away from competitors), as a consequence of increasing one's speed)
 * 1)  to move (quickly, with a purpose – see also )
 * 2)  to suddenly increase one's speed; to make a dash
 * 3)  to pull away, to pull ahead (move into the lead or increase one's lead (move (further) away from competitors), as a consequence of increasing one's speed)
 * 1)  to pull away, to pull ahead (move into the lead or increase one's lead (move (further) away from competitors), as a consequence of increasing one's speed)
 * 1)  to pull away, to pull ahead (move into the lead or increase one's lead (move (further) away from competitors), as a consequence of increasing one's speed)

Usage notes
Rycka and have some overlap with how pull is sometimes used for more general movement in English in, though it's not perfect. You can't "rycka/dra" ("yank/pull") into a driveway, for example.