0 the speed at which someone or something moves, or with which something happens or changes: --
These changes seem to me to be happening at too fast a pace.
For many years this company has set the pace (= has been the most successful company) in the communications industry.
Could you slow down - I can't keep pace with (= walk or run as fast as) you.
When she thought she heard someone following her, she quickened her pace.
1 a single step, or the distance you move when you take a single step: --
2 to get someone to run a race at a particular speed, for example by running with them --
3 to walk with regular steps in one direction and then back again, usually because you are worried or nervous: --
4 the speed at which someone or something moves, or with which something happens or changes: --
5 to walk in one direction and then in the opposite direction, often because you are worried or waiting for something to happen: --
However, by dropping the pace, the parents in turn could force the clergy, however briefly, to change direction.
Not everything commercializes at the same time at the same pace, and input markets are often undeveloped or absent even as commodities become marketable.
Towards the end of the 19th century the pace of colonial takeovers and commercial penetration of poor countries quickened.
In 1968, the economy was functioning at a normal pace, with sales, personal income, and industrial production all growing above average.
The production lacked direction in terms of pace, comic timing, and characterization.
These issues require on-farm enquiries to evaluate the work pace expectations of farmers and their interactions with on-farm practices.
Venous abnormalities due to the chronic presence of permanent transvenous pacing leads do occur, but they are not usually associated with significant clinical symptoms.
In sum, with the decline in rural income in the 1930s, pampean agriculture ceased to attract capital at the same pace as in the past.