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stride
[ strahyd ]
verb (used without object)
- to walk with long steps, as with vigor, haste, impatience, or arrogance.
- to take a long step:
to stride across a puddle.
- to straddle.
verb (used with object)
- to walk with long steps along, on, through, over, etc.:
to stride the deck.
- to pass over or across in one long step:
to stride a ditch.
- to straddle.
noun
- a striding manner or a striding gait.
- a long step in walking.
- (in animal locomotion) the act of progressive movement completed when all the feet are returned to the same relative position as at the beginning.
- the distance covered by such a movement:
He was walking a stride or two ahead of the others.
- a regular or steady course, pace, etc.
- a step forward in development or progress:
rapid strides in mastering algebra.
Synonyms: improvement, headway, progress, development, advancement
- strides, Australian Informal. trousers.
stride
/ straɪd /
noun
- a long step or pace
- the space measured by such a step
- a striding gait
- an act of forward movement by an animal, completed when the legs have returned to their initial relative positions
- progress or development (esp in the phrase make rapid strides )
- a regular pace or rate of progress
to be put off one's stride
to get into one's stride
- rowing the distance covered between strokes
- Also calledstride piano jazz a piano style characterized by single bass notes on the first and third beats and chords on the second and fourth
- informal.plural men's trousers
- take something in one's strideto do something without difficulty or effort
verb
- intr to walk with long regular or measured paces, as in haste, etc
- tr to cover or traverse by striding
he strode thirty miles
- often foll byover, across, etc to cross (over a space, obstacle, etc) with a stride
- intr rowing to achieve the desired rhythm in a racing shell
Derived Forms
- ˈstrider, noun
Other Words From
- strid·er noun
- strid·ing·ly adverb
- out·stride verb (used with object) outstrode outstridden outstriding
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of stride1
Idioms and Phrases
- hit one's stride,
- to achieve a regular or steady pace or course.
- to reach the point or level at which one functions most competently and consistently:
The quarterback didn't hit his stride until the second half of the game.
- take in stride, to deal with calmly; cope with successfully:
She was able to take her sudden rise to fame in stride.
More idioms and phrases containing stride
see hit one's stride ; make great strides ; take in stride .Example Sentences
Certainly, the Bulgarians have made strides in policing their side of the border.
Seated in a conference room at Disney’s Burbank studio, Jenkins is as chill as the boy in the picture — excited but also relaxed, taking this moment in stride.
He strode into the postgame press conference room with an easy smile while offering the sort of what’s-up greeting that one doesn’t normally get from nervous young quarterbacks.
But, while both have made significant strides in recent years, India’s rate stands at 35.7%, with the average across Sub-Saharan Africa’s 49 countries at 33.6%.
SpaceX has already made big strides testing his Starship rocket, the most powerful ever built.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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