All pace synonyms
pace
P p verb pace
- barreling β a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends.
- careered β an occupation or profession, especially one requiring special training, followed as one's lifework: He sought a career as a lawyer.
- move out β an act or instance of moving; movement.
- hasten β to move or act with haste; proceed with haste; hurry: to hasten to a place.
- make haste β swiftness of motion; speed; celerity: He performed his task with great haste. They felt the need for haste.
- backdated β Put an earlier date to (a document or agreement) than the actual one.
- footed β having a foot or feet (often used in combination): a four-footed animal.
- barrelled β a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends.
- get cracking β to break without complete separation of parts; become fissured: The plate cracked when I dropped it, but it was still usable.
- antecede β to go before, as in time, order, etc; precede
- barreled β Having the specified number of barrels.
- hoof β the horny covering protecting the ends of the digits or encasing the foot in certain animals, as the ox and horse.
- hasting β swiftness of motion; speed; celerity: He performed his task with great haste. They felt the need for haste.
- outrank β to have a higher rank than: A major outranks a captain in the army.
- ambulate β to wander about or move from one place to another
- cut and run β to make a rapid escape
- backdate β If a document or an arrangement is backdated, it is valid from a date before the date when it is completed or signed.
- crisscrossing β crossing over each other
- anachronize β To refer to, or put into, a wrong time.
- careering β an occupation or profession, especially one requiring special training, followed as one's lifework: He sought a career as a lawyer.
- march β to touch at the border; border.
- locomote β to move about, especially under one's own power.
- outranked β Simple past tense and past participle of outrank.
- anteceding β to go before, in time, order, rank, etc.; precede: Shakespeare antecedes Milton.
- keep up β to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
- barrelling β a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends.
- hoof it β the horny covering protecting the ends of the digits or encasing the foot in certain animals, as the ox and horse.
- dogtrot β a gentle trot, like that of a dog.
- gallop β to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed: They galloped off to meet their friends.
- locomoting β to move about, especially under one's own power.
- make tracks β a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
- dog it β a domesticated canid, Canis familiaris, bred in many varieties.
noun pace
- briskness β quick and active; lively: brisk trading; a brisk walk.
- downbeat β the downward stroke of a conductor's arm or baton indicating the first or accented beat of a measure.
- anabases β any small fish of the genus Anabas, of ponds and swamps in Africa and southeastern Asia.
- anabasis β the march of Cyrus the Younger and his Greek mercenaries from Sardis to Cunaxa in Babylonia in 401 bc, described by Xenophon in his Anabasis
- melioration β Historical Linguistics. semantic change in a word to a more approved or more respectable meaning. Compare pejoration (def 2).
- hastiness β moving or acting with haste; speedy; quick; hurried.
- weeks β a period of seven successive days, usually understood as beginning with Sunday and ending with Saturday.
- footstep β the setting down of a foot, or the sound so produced; footfall; tread.
- hurriedness β The state of being hurried.
- groove β a long, narrow cut or indentation in a surface, as the cut in a board to receive the tongue of another board (tongue-and-groove joint) a furrow, or a natural indentation on an organism.
- month β Also called calendar month. any of the twelve parts, as January or February, into which the calendar year is divided.
- cadence β The cadence of someone's voice is the way their voice gets higher and lower as they speak.
- year β a period of 365 or 366 days, in the Gregorian calendar, divided into 12 calendar months, now reckoned as beginning Jan. 1 and ending Dec. 31 (calendar year or civil year) Compare common year, leap year.
- impetuosity β the quality or condition of being impetuous.
- quickness β done, proceeding, or occurring with promptness or rapidity, as an action, process, etc.; prompt; immediate: a quick response.
- carriage β A carriage is an old-fashioned vehicle, usually for a small number of passengers, which is pulled by horses.
- hour β a period of time equal to one twenty-fourth of a mean solar or civil day and equivalent to 60 minutes: He slept for an hour.
- week β a period of seven successive days, usually understood as beginning with Sunday and ending with Saturday.