Определение a-pace в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- PACE
- Paper, Allied Industrial, Chemical and Energy Workers International Union
- PACE
- Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
- PACE
- Police and Criminal Evidence Act, 1984
- keep pace
- To progress at the same rate as another; to keep up
As he had grown older, he found that he had grown away from his people. Their interests and his were far removed. They had not kept pace with him, nor could they understand aught of the many strange and wonderful dreams that passed through the active brain of their human king. So limited was their vocabulary that Tarzan could not even talk with them of the many new truths, and the great fields of thought that his reading had opened up before his longing eyes, or make known ambitions which stirred his soul.
- keep pace
- To run at the same speed as a pacesetter
- medium pace
- describing a style of bowling, intermediate in speed between spin and pace, in which the bowler uses swing or seam to take wickets
- mend one's pace
- To speed up, travel faster; also, to adjust one's speed to match that of a companion
The hurt nigger moaned feebly somewhere near by, and then fetched a deep sigh that made me mend my pace away from there.
- pace
- Describing a bowler who bowls fast balls
- pace
- Set the speed in a race
- pace
- A 2-beat, lateral gait of a horse
- pace
- A step taken with the foot
Even at the duel, standing 10 paces apart, he could have satisfied Aaron’s honor.
- pace
- Measure by walking
- pace
- A measure of the hardness of a pitch and of the tendency of a cricket ball to maintain its speed after bouncing
- pace
- For ground forces, the speed of a column or element regulated to maintain a prescribed average speed.Joint Publication 1–02 U.S. Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms; 12 April 2001 (As Amended Through 14 April 2006)
- pace
- The collective noun for donkeys
- pace
- Easter
- pace
- Walk to and fro in a small space
Groups of men, in all imaginable attitudes, were lying, standing, sitting, or pacing up and down.
- pace
- Speed or velocity
The pace of the Olympic walk is much greater than normal human walking.
- pace
- With all due respect to
- pace
- An English Customary Unit of distance measuring approximately five feet.: English Customary Weights and Measures, © Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (§: Distance, ¶ № 6)
I have perambulated your field, and estimate its perimeter to be 219 paces.
- pace car
- A car that other cars drive behind before a race starts
- pace cars
- plural form of pace car
- pace egg
- A hard-boiled coloured egg traditionally made at Easter, often given to relatives and friends as a token of goodwill. It was traditional to jarp with the eggs before eating them
- pace eggs
- plural form of pace egg
- pace notes
- Detailed notes describing the route to be driven in rally racing, read by the codriver to the driver
- pace setter
- An individual, selected by the column commander, who travels in the lead vehicle or element to regulate the column speed and establish the pace necessary to meet the required movement orderJoint Publication 1-02 U.S. Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms; 12 April 2001 (As Amended Through 14 April 2006)
- pace setter
- The runner or driver or rider in the lead
- pace setters
- plural form of pace setter
- pace-egg
- A hard boiled coloured egg traditionally made at Easter, often given to relatives and friends as a token of goodwill. It was traditional to jarp with the eggs before eating them
- requiescant in pace
- May they rest in peace. Abbreviation: R.I.P. Singular: requiescat in pace
- requiescat in pace
- May he or she rest in peace. Abbreviation: R.I.P
- set the pace
- To establish the speed for a group to move at, for example in a race
- set the pace
- To establish a common goal by example
In May 2003, South Africa set the pace by banning thin plastic bags and imposing a tax on thick ones.
- snail's pace
- A very slow pace
My grandmother drives her car at a snail's pace.
- pace
- If you do something at your own pace, you do it at a speed that is comfortable for you. The computer will give students the opportunity to learn at their own pace
- at a snail pace
- Very slowly
- keep pace with someone
- Go as fast or go at the same rate as someone
- keep pace with something
- Go as fast or go at the same rate as something
- pace up and down
- Walk over and over the same short route nervously or anxiously
- apace
- {a} quickly, hastily, speedily, fast
- pace
- {n} a step, gait, degree, measure of five feet
- pace
- {n} the sheep of S. America, shaped like a camel
- pace
- {v} to move gently, to measure by steps
- change-of-pace
- (Spor) A baseball thrown with little velocity when the batter is expecting a fastball, change-up, change-of-pace ball, off-speed pitch
- pace
- (preposition) With the permission of; with deference to. Used to express polite or ironically polite disagreement: "I have not, pace my detractors, entered into any secret negotiations."
- pick up the pace
- Go a little faster, step on it. "We're walking rather slowly. Can we pick up the pace?"
- Apace
- with rapid movements; "he works quickly"
- accelerate the pace
- go faster, quicken the speed
- accelerating the pace
- quickening the speed or rate
- apace
- If something develops or continues apace, it is developing or continuing quickly. = speedily, swiftly. happening quickly (Probably from a pas )
- apace
- swiftly, quickly
- apace
- Quickly, rapidly, with speed
- apace
- With a quick pace; quick; fast; speedily
- at a slack pace
- at a slow rate, at a sluggish speed
- at a snail's pace
- very slowly, at an extremely slow speed
- future pace
- The process of placing new or desired behaviours, capabilities and or perceptual filters into the future for use in appropriate times and places (See Simulation Programming)
- future pace
- Process of mentally practicing (rehearsing) an event before it happens One of the key processes for ensuring the permanency of an outcome, a frequent and key ingredient in most NLP interventions
- future pace
- Rehearsing in all systems so that a specific behavior, or set of behaviors, becomes linked and sequenced in response to the appropriate cues and occurs naturally and automatically in future situations
- geometric pace
- a modern version of the Roman pace now taken to be 5 feet
- go at a good pace
- advance quickly, move quickly, travel quickly
- increase one's pace
- move faster
- keep pace
- maintain the same pace; "The child cannot keep step with his big brother"
- keep pace with
- move forward with; not fall behind
- mend one's pace
- accelerate one's pace, speed up, start to move faster
- military pace
- the length of a single step in marching (taken to be 30 inches for quick time or 36 inches for double time)
- pace
- Elizabethan for a pass or a walking step
- pace
- the overall rhythm of the team or of a player
- pace
- tempo or speed
- pace
- The length of a step in walking or marching, reckoned from the heel of one foot to the heel of the other; used as a unit in measuring distances; as, he advanced fifty paces
- pace
- People Advancing Compassionate Ministries Monthly donors to various missionary ministry needs
- pace
- To go; to walk; specifically, to move with regular or measured steps
- pace
- A slow gait; a footpace
- pace
- Philadelphia Automated Communications and Executions System
- pace
- regulate or set the pace of; "Pace your efforts"
- pace
- The speed of speech or movement, often used in building up or down to a climax
- pace
- the rate of moving (especially walking or running)
- pace
- For ground forces, the speed of a column or element regulated to maintain a prescribed average speed
- pace
- If you put someone through their paces or make them go through their paces, you get them to show you how well they can do something. The British coach is putting the boxers through their paces
- pace
- a small aisle or passage way off the main nave aisle in a church; the nave seats in All Saints' are divided on each side by a pace
- pace
- 1 The variation within the gait; e g , collected, working, lengthened, medium, extended The variation in meters per minute occurs ideally because of the change in stride lenght, with no change in tempo [NOTE: The FEI Rules for Dressage are at this time without any specific term for what in English (per Webster) is correctly called "pace " Further, the FEI translation of the French l'allure was "pace," rather than the more exact English translation of "gait" ] 2 A gait in which the lateral pairs of legs move in unison (also called "amble") - not a dressage gait
- pace
- PACE is a full-time college transfer program for the full-time working adult
- pace
- A broad step or platform; any part of a floor slightly raised above the rest, as around an altar, or at the upper end of a hall
- pace
- A pace is the distance that you move when you take one step. He'd only gone a few paces before he stopped again
- pace
- {e} with the permission of, with the indulgence of
- pace
- {f} take regular steps; regulate the speed of; walk back and forth (especially while absorbed in anxious thought); measure an area by counting the number of even strides that must be taken to cross it
- pace
- Program for All-inclusive Care for the Elderly Sometimes referred to as Bienvivir
- pace
- the distance covered by a step; "he stepped off ten paces from the old tree and began to dig"
- pace
- A device in a loom, to maintain tension on the warp in pacing the web
- pace
- To move quickly by lifting the legs on the same side together, as a horse; to amble with rapidity; to rack
- pace
- the rate of some repeating event
- pace
- To walk over with measured tread; to move slowly over or upon; as, the guard paces his round
- pace
- A single movement from one foot to the other in walking; a step
- pace
- walk with slow or fast paces; "He paced up and down the hall"
- pace
- at a snail's pace: see snail
- pace
- a unit of length equal to 3 feet; defined as 91 44 centimeters; originally taken to be the average length of a stride
- pace
- the relative speed of progress or change; "he lived at a fast pace"; "he works at a great rate"; "the pace of events accelerated"
- pace
- n the overall rhythm of the team or of a player
- pace
- The pace is a two-beat lateral gait in which a horse moves both right feet and then moves both left feet In a pace the front and rear foot are picked up and then set down simultaneously making only one beat A pacing horse will move its head side to side to counter the motion of its feet
- pace
- Police and Criminal Evidence Act (1984)
- pace
- An English Customary Unit of distance measuring approximately five feet
- pace
- To measure by steps or paces; as, to pace a piece of ground
- pace
- Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly A model for managed health care programming which was developed as a demonstration project by On-Lok
- pace
- Pace is the suburban bus division of RTA, which provides the fixed-route bus, paratransit, and vanpool services to communities throughout the suburbs and from suburban locations to the City of Chicago
- pace
- Manner of stepping or moving; gait; walk; as, the walk, trot, canter, gallop, and amble are paces of the horse; a swaggering pace; a quick pace
- pace
- go at a pace; "The horse paced
- pace
- If you pace yourself when doing something, you do it at a steady rate. It was a tough race and I had to pace myself
- pace
- If you keep pace with someone who is walking or running, you succeed in going as fast as them, so that you remain close to them. With four laps to go, he kept pace with the leaders = keep up
- pace
- The speed at which the ball is hit It's commonly used to mean a great deal of speed, but in fact a well-paced shot may be hit rather slowly A common tactic against a hard-hitting opponent is to vary the pace from one shot to the next
- pace
- n the overall rhythm of the team or of a player 始終的節å¥ï¼ˆä¸€ä½éšŠå“¡æˆ–一支çƒéšŠæ‰“çƒçš„節å¥ï¼‰ã€‚
- pace
- a step in walking or running
- pace
- go at a pace; "The horse paced"
- pace
- To develop, guide, or control the pace or paces of; to teach the pace; to break in
- pace
- To proceed; to pass on
- pace
- The PACE enrollees are funded from another program Hence they are excluded from the Market Penetration reports Effective Jan-2002 some of the Pace Plans are paid by our program and will be included in the State county and State County Plan report
- pace
- {i} step, stride; tempo; rate; speed of progress
- pace
- The skill of maintaining a good steady pace in learning and demonstrating the skills specified for the course For details, see Sect 6c of "Student Strategies for Success in CBI Physics," module MISN-0-155, and your CBI Student Handbook
- pace
- If you pace a small area, you keep walking up and down it, because you are anxious or impatient. As they waited, Kravis paced the room nervously He found John pacing around the flat, unable to sleep She stared as he paced and yelled
- pace
- The pace of something is the speed at which it happens or is done. Many people were not satisfied with the pace of change. people who prefer to live at a slower pace Interest rates would come down as the recovery gathered pace. = speed
- pace
- the rate of moving (especially walking or running) measure (distances) by pacing; "step off ten yards"
- pace
- If something keeps pace with something else that is changing, it changes quickly in response to it. Farmers are angry because the rise fails to keep pace with inflation. = keep up
- pace
- Any single movement, step, or procedure
- pace
- The speed at which the story and action in a play runs
- pace
- Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly
- pace
- Police and Criminal Evidence Act
- pace
- a step in walking or running the relative speed of progress or change; "he lived at a fast pace"; "he works at a great rate"; "the pace of events accelerated"
- pace
- Your pace is the speed at which you walk. He moved at a brisk pace down the rue St Antoine
- pace
- Specifically, a kind of fast amble; a rack
- pace
- the 'speed' at which a text moves; for example, an adventure story may be 'fast-moving' with lots of incident and dialogue, while a romantic novel may be 'slower', containing less action and more description
- pace
- "PACE" is an acronym for the "Personal Assessment of the College Environment," a climate survey administered in November 2000 to the faculty and staff of the College (both full-time and part-time employees) The same survey was administered in spring semester 1997 during the College's strategic planning effort Results of PACE will be used by self-study research committees PACE is administered by NILIE, the National Initiative for Leadership & Institutional Effectiveness, at North Carolina State University According the NILIE, "the purpose of the PACE instrument is to promote open and constructive communication and to establish priorities for change by obtaining the satisfaction estimate of employees concerning the campus climate " Self-study research committees were provided an opportunity to submit questions that could be added to PACE
- pace
- (1) n Any of the various units of distance based on the length of a human step (2) n A way to estimate the distance between two points each time your right (or left) foot touches the ground
- pace
- To pass away; to die
- pace
- measure (distances) by pacing; "step off ten yards"
- pace car
- A usually high-performance automobile that leads a group of competing cars through the pace lap of a race but does not participate in the race
- pace car
- {i} (Automobile Racing) car leading the group of competing cars around the course before the race starts and then pulls off the course
- pace car
- a high-performance car that leads a parade of competing cars through the pace lap and then pulls off the course
- pace lap
- the first lap of a car race that prepares the cars for a fast start
- pace lap
- The initial lap of a motor vehicle race in which the racers warm up their engines and prepare for a fast start
- pace of life
- speed of life, pace of daily activity
- pace up and down
- walk back and forth
- pace-maker
- instrument which guards the heart's beats of activity
- quicken the pace
- increase the rate of speed, accelerate the pace
- roman pace
- 85 English feet measured as the distance from the heel of one foot to the heel of the same foot when next it touches the ground
- roman pace
- an ancient Roman unit of length 4
- set the pace
- use an example; set the rhythm
- snail's pace
- very slowly, in a sluggish rhythm