Encyclo - De online Nederlandstalige encyclopedieën in één oogopslag
Encyclopedia Sources Categories About Encyclo
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Index
Agriculture and Industry
Animals and Nature
Architecture and Buildings
Arts
Business and Law
Earth and Environment
Economy and Finance
Education
Electronics and Engineering
Film and Animation
Food and Drink
General
General technical and industrial
Government and organisations
Health and Medicine
History and Culture
Hobbies and Crafts
Language and Literature
Legal
Management
Mathematics and statistics
Meteorology and astronomy
Military and Defence
Music and Sound
People and society
Sciences
Sport and Leisure
Technical and IT
Travel and Transportation

Look up: Pace

  1. Pace
    Pace is a CDP in Santa Rosa County Florida, USA Pace is a town in Bolivar County Mississippi, USA
    Found on http://fas.org/news/reference/probert/GM

  2. Pace
    The speed at which the story and action in a play runs.
    Found on http://www.dramatic.com.au/glossary/glos

  3. PACE
    See Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly.
    Found on http://www.pohly.com/terms_p.html

  4. pace
    The pace of something is the speed at which it happens or is done. For example if you say that someone talks at a slow pace you mean they talk slowly. Pace can also be the distance you move when you take one step. For example 'he took two paces to the left'. If you pace up and down you keep walking up and down. You pace up and down because you are worried or want something to happen quickly.
    Example: He read his speech at a fast pace.
    Found on http://www.bbc.co.uk/skillswise/glossary

  5. pace
    [n] - the rate of moving (especially walking or running) 2. [n] - the relative speed of progress or change 3. [n] - a step in walking or running 4. [v] - go at a pace, as of a horse 5. [v] - walk with slow or fast paces 6. [v] - regulate or set the pace of 7. [v] - measure by pacing, as of a room 8. [v] - measure by pacing, as of distances
    Found on http://www.webdictionary.co.uk/definitio

  6. PACE
    Priority Access Control Enabled [3Com]
    Found on http://www.geocities.com/ikind_babel/bab

  7. Pace
    The tempo of the performance.
    Found on http://www.queens-theatre.co.uk/technica

  8. PACE
    Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984.
    Found on http://www.compactlaw.co.uk/legal_glossa

  9. PACE
    A CPU based on the Nova design, but with 16-bit addressing, more addressing modes and a 10 level stack (like the Intel 8008). (1994-11-30)
    Found on

  10. PACE
    Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology [periodical, périodique]
    Found on http://www.geocities.com/~mlshams/acrony

  11. PACE
    People with Arthritis Can Exercise
    Found on http://www.geocities.com/~mlshams/acrony

  12. PACE
    Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly
    Found on http://www.geocities.com/~mlshams/acrony

  13. pace
    any of the various foot movements of a horse as a trot,pace,canter or gallop Category: agriculture, fisheries, forestry - food processing industries
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  14. Pace
    Definition (keystage 3) An approximate unit of length; how far apart your footprints are when you walk normally. The Romans used it as an exact unit, and defined their mile in terms of it.
    Found on http://thesaurus.maths.org/mmkb/entry.ht

  15. Pace
    Pace noun [ Middle English pas , French pas , from Latin passus a step, pace, orig., a stretching out of the feet in walking; confer pandere , passum , to spread, stretch; perhaps akin to English patent . Confer Pas , Pass .] 1. A single movement from one foot to the other in walking; a step. 2. The length of a step in walk …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/P/1

  16. Pace
    Pace intransitive verb [ imperfect & past participle Paced ; present participle & verbal noun Pacing .] 1. To go; to walk; specifically, to move with regular or measured steps. "I paced on slowly." Pope. "With speed so pace ." Shak. 2. To proceed; to pass on. [ Obsolete] « Or [ ere …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/P/1

  17. Pace
    Pace transitive verb 1. To walk over with measured tread; to move slowly over or upon; as, the guard paces his round. " Pacing light the velvet plain." T. Warton. 2. To measure by steps or paces; as, to pace a piece of ground. 3. To develop, guide, or control the pace or paces of; to teach the pace; to break in. « If you can, pace …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/P/1

  18. pace
    1. A single movement from one foot to the other in walking; a step. ... 2. The length of a step in walking or marching, reckoned from the heel of one foot to the heel of the other; used as a unit in measuring distances; as, he advanced fifty paces. ... Ordinarily the pace is estimated at two and one half linear feet; but in measuring distances be ste …
    Found on http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?p

  19. pace
    stride noun a step in walking or running
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  20. pace
    gait noun the rate of moving (especially walking or running)
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  21. pace
    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`
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  22. pace
    a rate of movement; in walking, one step
    Found on http://www3.newberry.org/k12maps/glossar

  23. PACE
    `PACE` may refer to: * PACE Wholesale Club (now defunct) * Planetary Association for Clean Energy * Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe * Palm Application Compatibility Environment * Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, in the United Kingdom * Academy for Gifted Children in Richmond Hill, Ontario. The acronym PACE stands for `Programming for Academic and Creative Excellence.` * Partners for the Advancement of Collaborative Engineeri...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PACE

  24. PACE
    `PACE` may refer to: * PACE Wholesale Club (now defunct) * Planetary Association for Clean Energy * Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe * Palm Application Compatibility Environment * Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, in the United Kingdom * Academy for Gifted Children in Richmond Hill, Ontario. The acronym PACE stands for `Programming for Academic and Creative Excellence.` * Partners for the Advancement of Collaborative Engineeri...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PACE

  25. Pace
    `Pace` may refer to: *Pace (speed), the speed at which movement occurs *Pacemaker one who sets the pace or speed in a race *Pace (unit of length) *pacemaker, an implantable device used to regulate the heartbeat *`peace` in Italian, sometimes written on a rainbow flag *`with peace` in Latin (ablative case of `pax`), sometimes used in formal writing to indicate disagreement with a source *Pace, a horse gait *Snail's pace, at a very slow pace or sp...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pace

No exact matches found.
We are now searching for
• words containing `Pace`;
• Alternative spelling;
• Wider definitions.

One moment please...

8 January 2009

This day in history:
Rationing began on 8 January 1940. Each person was allowed a specific mount of basic foods. In July 1940 a complete ban was put on the making or selling of iced cakes, and in September the manufacture of `candied peel` or `crystallised cherries` meant the death knell for the traditional wedding cake. On 1st December 1941 the Ministry of Food introduced the points rationing scheme for items such as canned meat, fish and vegetables at first. Everyone was given 16 points a month, later raised to twenty, to spend as wished at any shop that had the items wanted. read more

Encyclo in your browser

Encyclo in the search bar of your browser? Click for more info! Would you like to use Encyco more often? Add an (extra) search option to the search field of your browser. Installed in 3 seconds, easy to remove.
More info

What is Encyclo?

Encyclo is a search engine for terms and definitions. Hundreds of websites contain wordlists, each with their own speciality. Encyclo brings those lists together and makes searching for definitions a lot easier.

Statistics

Encyclo has been online since october 15th 2007. It currently contains 3,190,154 words from 953 sources. The words are listed in 32 categories.

Search

Type a word and press the `Search` button.
Quick search
Translate

To
Spelling checker
Synonyms
Merriam-Webster
Google Define

Recent searches

The most recent searches on Encyclo. Between brackets you will find the number of results and number of related results.
rmn (2/3)
bridport (1/2)
ingsoc (2/2)
Jimmy Rogers (2/2)
Ashmaka (1/8)
Kumara Varma (1/2)
Creance (4/12)
Michael Mina (1/40)
Jimmy Harnen (2/2)
Orient Lines (4/6)
Lambya (1/40)
Victoria Vicki Nelson (1/0)
Francis Shubael Smith (1/0)
RAIDEN (3/10)
Posthumus (1/37)
Papadam (1/13)
Michael Lohr (1/40)
Impact weights (1/40)
raiden (3/10)
Ashmole (1/7)

© Encyclo 2008
Contact