Pace in a sentence as a noun

At the same time, the pace of the cutting edge grows faster and faster.

Parse, also, has essentially gone on it's own and created things at it's own pace.

Maybe it's also because I _hate_ riding at a moderate pace.

Everyone designs and creates at their own pace, and age seemed pretty meaningless to me.

Rotate eye contact over your three best friends as you talk, at whatever a natural pace would be for you.

Its structure was put in place with the pace and methods of innovation fostered by the industrial revolution.

You have to read books written by people who have gone before, and learn from their mistakes, which you can do at a far more rapid pace than you can by making all those mistakes yourself.

Pace in a sentence as a verb

Possibly the pace is so slow that it is hard to see, but still, evolution is still happening, for every species on the planet, including humans.

> He noted that during a time of growing litigation in the smartphone industry, "innovation continues at an absolutely breakneck pace.

Then again, I don't ride my bike every single day.> The fact that everyone cycles, or knows someone who does, means that drivers are more sympathetic to cyclists when they have to share space on the roads.

".Net programmers are largely Enterprise programmers whom are not constitutionally constructed to create large scalable websites at a startup pace.

On the other hand, actually drawing and writing things out while discussing the topic slows things down a bit, allowing the audience to engage and understand the topic at a more learning-friendly pace.

Today, demographics and looking behind the official economic statistics, and considering that China has not yet democratized as much as Japan had in the era when the Liberal Democratic Party had a lock on national power all suggest that China is most likely to have a "lost decade" that continues into two or more lost decades as China's economic growth fails to keep pace with the Chinese regime's world power ambitions.

Pace definitions

noun

the rate of moving (especially walking or running)

See also: gait

noun

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

See also: footstep step stride

noun

the relative speed of progress or change; "he lived at a fast pace"; "he works at a great rate"; "the pace of events accelerated"

See also: rate

noun

a step in walking or running

See also: stride tread

noun

the rate of some repeating event

See also: tempo

noun

a unit of length equal to 3 feet; defined as 91.44 centimeters; originally taken to be the average length of a stride

See also: yard

verb

walk with slow or fast paces; "He paced up and down the hall"

verb

go at a pace; "The horse paced"

verb

measure (distances) by pacing; "step off ten yards"

See also: step

verb

regulate or set the pace of; "Pace your efforts"