Stride in a sentence as a noun

Keep in mind, though, that it makes is somewhat easier to take being fired in stride when you have a $200 million cushion.

"Friday" became viral mostly as a mockery, but she seemed to take it all in stride and make the most of it.

I think our egos can take the abbreviated form of "assembled/managed the team that built G+" in stride.

If a boy is walking with a long stride, I don't think anything particular, but if a girl is walking gallantly, I feel "that's cool.

Then, without breaking a stride, he asked if I could send any candidates his way, to fill his gaps in finding talented people.

He's not suggesting that MS - a large and mature company - should still be growing like companies that only hit their stride recently.

Stride in a sentence as a verb

However, this comes at an extra indirection that affects all array operations via the stride vector.

Companies at this stage--startups hitting stride--don't need "experimental R&D dev arms.

OS/2 faded away before the rise of modern malware had really hit its stride, but I suspect the SIQ problem would also have led to all sorts of security issues.

In this case, what we're measuring is: "allocate an array, fill it, and then scan it with various stride lengths and mutate it, and then free it.. what does that cost on average, given this spread of array sizes?

I gotta agree with napoleoncomplex - Mozilla has truly hit its stride in recent years and for my money is an example of the corporation of tomorrow - code literate and transparent, yet still kicking **** and taking namesEdit: even corporations of tomorrow will not be immune to politics it seems - rereading the post and blog makes it sound much more like a Eich/Baker coup than a well planned transition.

Stride definitions

noun

a step in walking or running

See also: pace tread

noun

the distance covered by a step; "he stepped off ten paces from the old tree and began to dig"

See also: footstep pace step

noun

significant progress (especially in the phrase "make strides"); "they made big strides in productivity"

verb

walk with long steps; "He strode confidently across the hall"

verb

cover or traverse by taking long steps; "She strode several miles towards the woods"