Skip to main content

paced

/peyst/US // peɪst //

有节奏的,有节奏,有节奏感的,有进度的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : having a specified or indicated pace: fast-paced.
    • : counted out or measured by paces.
    • : run at a pace set by a pacesetter.

Examples

  • Grover Gardner narrates this fast-paced, touching and often funny novel with his usual clarity and panache.

  • The book is wide-ranging, fast-paced and highly entertaining, covering aspects of evolution, extinction, geology and climate change.

  • In fast-paced, short chapters, Maraniss writes of Burke’s pain and of his legacy.

  • Nonetheless, this fast-paced and well-researched book underscores how the nation’s legal and political systems struggle to hold the most powerful elected leaders responsible for their crimes.

  • This might sound slow-paced, but it could bring in significant economic benefits.

  • In The Lodger an ominous character paced the floor, which Hitchcock constructed of glass.

  • It is a joy to watch Shafer seamlessly work incisive commentary on contemporary life into a fast-paced spine-chiller.

  • “The good news is everything is really fast paced on the Internet,” she said.

  • The novel is a tautly paced thriller, but it also packs a searing satire of the much-ballyhooed modern world we live in.

  • The Sud Express dining car served a seven-course lunch, paced gracefully to last most of the journey.

  • It was a difficulty foreseen long ago in Socialist discussions, but never completely met by the thorough-paced Communist.

  • I joined him without speaking, and in silence we paced side by side for another quarter of an hour.

  • At a little distance from them, Garnache paced up and down to keep himself warm.

  • But Harris, exhausted and shaken as he was to the very core, paced by his side, only half listening.

  • The revelation was made soon after tea, when she sidled close up to him as they paced slowly along the sea-front in the dusk.