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    pace
    /pās/

    noun

    • 1. a single step taken when walking or running: "Kirov stepped back a pace" Similar stepstridefootstep
    • 2. consistent and continuous speed in walking, running, or moving: "most traffic moved at the pace of the riverboat" Similar speedrateswiftnessquickness

    verb

    • 1. walk at a steady and consistent speed, especially back and forth and as an expression of one's anxiety or annoyance: "we paced up and down in exasperation"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Dec 21, 2014 · The word pace is a Latin word, not an English word with a Latin root. For this reason, it’s usually written in italics when it occurs in an English sentence. It’s a form of pax, which is Latin for “peace”. Pace means “if so-and-so will permit” or “with deference to”, literally “with peace”. In English, it’s a softener for ...

  3. Punches were traded or made rather quickly. Compare:. The San Diego Legion will also benefit in 2019 from Fijian rugby union player and Olympic Sevens gold medalist Jasa Veremalua who’s [sic] speed and precision offloads ensures [sic] a game played at pace.

  4. Feb 23, 2020 · 0. "pace/rush/haste" have collocation with "frantic", i.e. " frantic pace/rush/haste ". " pace " means the speed at which sb/sth walks, runs or moves (According to Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary) " frantic " means extremely hurried and using a lot of energy, but not very organized (According to Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ...

  5. Nov 18, 2021 · "keep up with" and "keep pace with" both have more or less the same meaning like progressing at the same rate as someone or something else. While using "keep up with" and "keep pace with", suggests that both parties are already on the same level. "Catch up with" has the meaning that you are trying to reach a person who is already ahead of you.

  6. Sep 24, 2021 · 2. The expression "to put someone/something through its paces" means to test something. It originally related to horses: a pace is like a trot, but the two legs on the same side of the horse move forward together.

  7. Mar 30, 2013 · A pace usually means the stride one ordinarily takes in unimpeded walking: roughly thirty inches, or three-quarters of a meter. But the ancient Roman military passus, usually translated 'pace', was two strides: in marching, the distance between successive strikes of the same heel. The English 'mile' of just over 5,000 feet derives from the ...

  8. Pace (verb) Definition 1. Walk at a steady speed, especially without a particular destination and as an expression of anxiety or annoyance. ‘we paced up and down in exasperation’. ‘she had been pacing the room’. So "pace the room" means to emotionally walk back and forth in the room. In the context you gave, jetlag (restlessness) is ...

  9. Nov 27, 2022 · That is the only possible meaning of "relaxing atmosphere/environment". However, "relaxed" can have another meaning, that of informality and lack of restrictions. For example, some events or places have an expectation that you dress or behave in a certain way, and others give you more licence to do as you please.

  10. When place means home, the normal preposition to indicate a current location is at. Let's go to your place. I'm at her place. It takes half an hour to go from her place to mine. While “in your place” is possible, it isn't common; in cases where the right preposition is in, the idiomatic phrase would use a different word: “in your house ...

  11. Jul 16, 2015 · In many contexts there's no real difference. But including come to before the primary verb is effectively a "spatial" figurative usage, implying you have "traveled" some considerable distance (in time, and/or between different widely-separated mental states) before "arriving" at your realization.

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