The earlier version of the Wycliffe Bible, done around 1382, is attributed to John Wycliffe as the main translator and editor/writer.
There are 250 Wycliffe Bibles that survive today in various degrees of completeness.
There are 89 Wycliffe Bibles that contain just the New Testament.
There are fifteen Wycliffe Bibles that have just the four Gospels of the New Testament.
There is one that is a manuscript by itself, while there are six attached to the later version of Wycliffe Bibles.
The other two General Prologues are attached to revised earlier version Wycliffe Bibles, revised 1395-1397.
There are more than 200 later versions of the Wycliffe Bible that do not have the General Prologue attached.
The first great English translation was the Wycliffe Bible (ca. 1382), which showed the weaknesses of an underdeveloped English prose.
Studylight version of The Wycliffe Bible (1395) Searchable by phrase or chapter/verse reference.
The Wycliffe Bible (1395), translated from the Latin Vulgate, uses "rushed".