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1 ♦ pace
♦ pace (1) /peɪs/n.1 passo; (fig.) andatura, velocità: at (a) walking pace, a passo d'uomo; furious pace, grande velocità; foga; precipitazione; at a brisk (o cracking) pace, a ritmo veloce; a passo spedito; at a slow pace, a lenti passi; at a steady pace, ad andatura regolare; to go at a good pace, andare di buon passo; to quicken one's pace, allungare il passo; accelerare; to stand the pace, reggere il passo; tenere l'andatura della corsa; to force the pace, forzare il passo2 ambio● ( cricket) pace bowler, lanciatore che effettua lanci veloci □ ( sport) pace car, vettura staffetta; automobile che fa l'andatura ( nel primo giro del circuito) □ to gather pace, acquistare velocità □ to go the pace, andare a tutta velocità; (fig.) correre la cavallina, fare la bella vita □ to keep pace with sb. [st.], essere (o andare) al passo con q. [qc.]; ( anche fig.) tenere il passo di, reggere il ritmo di q. [qc.] □ to mend one's pace, cambiar passo; affrettarsi □ to be off the pace, (ipp.) essere nelle retrovie; (fig.) essere in posizione di svantaggio □ to put sb. through his paces, far fare una prova (o un provino) a q. □ to set the pace, ( sport) fare l'andatura; dare il passo; (fig.) fare da battistrada □ (fig.) to show one's paces, dare dimostrazione delle proprie capacità.pace (2) /ˈpɑ:tʃeɪ/ (lat.)prep.con buona pace di; con tutto il rispetto per.(to) pace /peɪs/A v. i.1 andare al passo; camminare; passeggiareB v. t.2 ( sport) fare l'andatura per ( un corridore, un podista, ecc.): My trainer was pacing me on a bicycle, seguendomi in bicicletta, il mio allenatore mi faceva l'andatura -
2 pace
I [peɪs]1) (step, measure) passo m.2) (rate of movement) ritmo m., andatura f.at a fast, slow pace — velocemente, lentamente
to keep pace with sth. — andare al passo con qcs. (anche fig.)
to step up, slow down the pace — accelerare, rallentare il passo
to set the pace — dare il passo; fig. fare da battistrada
••II 1. [peɪs]to put sb. through their paces — mettere qcn. alla prova
verbo transitivo percorrere, misurare (a passi) [cage, room]2.verbo intransitivo (anche pace up and down) camminare su e giùto pace up and down sth. — misurare qcs. a grandi passi
* * *[peis] 1. noun1) (a step: He took a pace forward.) passo2) (speed of movement: a fast pace.) andatura2. verb(to walk backwards and forwards (across): He paced up and down.) camminare- keep pace with
- pace out
- put someone through his paces
- set the pace
- show one's paces* * *I [peɪs]1) (step, measure) passo m.2) (rate of movement) ritmo m., andatura f.at a fast, slow pace — velocemente, lentamente
to keep pace with sth. — andare al passo con qcs. (anche fig.)
to step up, slow down the pace — accelerare, rallentare il passo
to set the pace — dare il passo; fig. fare da battistrada
••II 1. [peɪs]to put sb. through their paces — mettere qcn. alla prova
verbo transitivo percorrere, misurare (a passi) [cage, room]2.verbo intransitivo (anche pace up and down) camminare su e giùto pace up and down sth. — misurare qcs. a grandi passi
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3 quicken quick·en
['kwɪk(ə)n]1. vtaffrettare, accelerare, (fig: feelings) stimolareto quicken one's pace — affrettare or allungare il passo
2. vi -
4 quick
[kwɪk] 1.1) (speedy) [ pace] veloce, rapido, svelto; [heartbeat, train, meal] veloce; [ profit] rapido, in tempi rapidi; [ storm] breve2) (clever) [child, student] vivace, pronto, intelligente3) (prompt)to be quick to learn to be a quick learner imparare in fretta; he was quick to see the advantages — ne ha immediatamente visto i vantaggi
4) (lively)2. 3.nome anat. med. carne f. viva••to cut o sting sb. to the quick toccare qcn. sul vivo; to make a quick buck fare soldi alla svelta (e facilmente); to make a quick killing — fare fortuna in fretta
* * *[kwik] 1. adjective1) (done, said, finished etc in a short time: a quick trip into town.) veloce, rapido2) (moving, or able to move, with speed: He's a very quick walker; I made a grab at the dog, but it was too quick for me.) veloce3) (doing something, able to do something, or done, without delay; prompt; lively: He is always quick to help; a quick answer; He's very quick at arithmetic.) veloce, pronto2. adverb(quickly: quick-frozen food.) velocemente- quickly- quicken
- quickness
- quicklime
- quicksands
- quicksilver
- quick-tempered
- quick-witted
- quick-wittedly
- quick-wittedness* * *[kwɪk] 1.1) (speedy) [ pace] veloce, rapido, svelto; [heartbeat, train, meal] veloce; [ profit] rapido, in tempi rapidi; [ storm] breve2) (clever) [child, student] vivace, pronto, intelligente3) (prompt)to be quick to learn to be a quick learner imparare in fretta; he was quick to see the advantages — ne ha immediatamente visto i vantaggi
4) (lively)2. 3.nome anat. med. carne f. viva••to cut o sting sb. to the quick toccare qcn. sul vivo; to make a quick buck fare soldi alla svelta (e facilmente); to make a quick killing — fare fortuna in fretta
См. также в других словарях:
quicken the pace — increase the rate of speed, accelerate the pace … English contemporary dictionary
accelerate the pace — go faster, quicken the speed … English contemporary dictionary
quicken — verb (I, T) 1 to become quicker or make something quicker: the quickening pace of technological change | quicken your pace (=walk faster): Ray glanced at his watch and quickened his pace. | your heart/pulse quickens (=your heart beats faster… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
pace — pace1 [ peıs ] noun ** ▸ 1 speed ▸ 2 exciting quality ▸ 3 walking/running step ▸ 4 ability to run quickly ▸ 5 way a horse walks/runs ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) singular or uncount the speed at which something happens or is done: the pace of something: The… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
pace — I UK [peɪs] / US noun Word forms pace : singular pace plural paces ** 1) [singular/uncountable] the speed at which something happens or is done the pace of something: The pace of technological change increased steadily during the 20th century.… … English dictionary
pace — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 one step VERB + PACE ▪ take, walk ▪ Take two paces forward. ▪ step back ▪ Step back three paces. PREPO … Collocations dictionary
quicken — quickener, n. /kwik euhn/, v.t. 1. to make more rapid; accelerate; hasten: She quickened her pace. 2. to give or restore vigor or activity to; stir up, rouse, or stimulate: to quicken the imagination. 3. to revive; restore life to: The spring… … Universalium
quicken — quick•en [[t]ˈkwɪk ən[/t]] v. t. 1) to make more rapid; accelerate; hasten: She quickened her pace[/ex] 2) to give vigor to; stimulate: to quicken the imagination[/ex] 3) to restore life to; revive: The spring rains quickened the earth[/ex] 4) to … From formal English to slang
quicken — /ˈkwɪkən/ (say kwikuhn) verb (t) 1. to make more rapid; accelerate; hasten: she quickened her pace. 2. to make quick or alive; restore life to. 3. to give or restore vigour or activity to; stir up, rouse, or stimulate: to quicken the imagination …
quicken — verb 1) she quickened her pace Syn: speed up, accelerate, step up, hasten, hurry (up) 2) the film quickened his interest in nature Syn: stimulate, excite, arouse, rouse, stir up, activate … Thesaurus of popular words
quicken — quick|en [ˈkwıkən] v [I and T] 1.) written to become quicker or make something quicker ▪ Ray glanced at his watch and quickened his pace (=began to walk faster) . ▪ Companies are finding it hard to cope with the quickening pace of technological… … Dictionary of contemporary English