Chase in a sentence as a noun

"The cops killed one of the suspects then pursued the rest, then a pedestrian died in the chase.

If everyone was going out to do and chase whatever it is they want there will be no room for you.

In my experience no HR person nor upper-management exec has to chase your boss down to push you out.

It risks the lives of hundreds living and walking in the path of the chase all for the sake of punishing 1 or 2 individuals.

Chase in a sentence as a verb

After watching police chases on TV my whole life, I really want to know:What's the logical strategy in a police chase?

Police in America seem to be willing to escalate a confrontation or "chase" to almost any level in order to prevent a bad guy from getting away.

This sounds like a pretty typical trajectory for a failed startup: CEO dreams big, encourages sales guys to chase big fish through the commission structure, but meanwhile the big fish demand more features, guarantees, complex contracts, etc. than 15 smaller customers would.

In every one of those ******** articles, someone had to marshall real arguments, chase down real sources, and in many cases defend those arguments against both bona fide Wikipedia contributors and also sockpuppets of the subjects of the article.

Chase definitions

noun

the act of pursuing in an effort to overtake or capture; "the culprit started to run and the cop took off in pursuit"

See also: pursuit pursual following

noun

United States politician and jurist who served as chief justice of the United States Supreme Court (1808-1873)

See also: Chase

noun

a rectangular metal frame used in letterpress printing to hold together the pages or columns of composed type that are printed at one time

verb

go after with the intent to catch; "The policeman chased the mugger down the alley"; "the dog chased the rabbit"

See also: trail tail track

verb

pursue someone sexually or romantically

verb

cut a groove into; "chase silver"

verb

cut a furrow into a columns

See also: furrow chamfer