stride
stride 英 [straɪd] 美 [straɪd]
n. 大步;步幅;进展 vt. 跨过;大踏步走过;跨坐在… vi. 跨;跨过;大步行走
进行时:striding 过去式:strode 过去分词:strode 第三人称单数:strides 名词复数:strides
- The noun stride means "significant progress." You might make a huge stride towards making peace with the rival school by hosting a block party and inviting their students.
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- n. 大步;步幅;进展
- vt. 跨过;大踏步走过;跨坐在…
- vi. 跨;跨过;大步行走
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1. Try shortening your stride when you run.
试着在奔跑的时候缩短步幅。
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2. Instead of flying off the handle every time something bad happens, you could take it all in stride.
在糟糕的事情发生后,不必每一次都停下来处理它,你可以大步前进将其抛在脑后。
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3. Shorten your stride.
缩短你的跨步。
- stride (n.) "a step in walking," especially a long one, from Old English stride "a stride, a step," from the root of stride (v.). Compare Dutch strijd, Old High German strit, German Streit "fight, contention, combat," Swedish and Danish strid "combat, contention." From c. 1300 as a measure of distance roughly the length of a stride. Figurative meaning "advance rapidly, make progress" is from c. 1600. Of animals (especially horses) from early 17c. To take (something) in stride (1832), i.e. "without change of gait," originally is of horses leaping hedges in the hunting-field; figurative sense attested from 1902. To hit (one's) stride is from horse-racing. Jazz music stride tempo is attested from 1938. Meaning "a standing with the legs apart, a straddle" is from 1590s.
- stride (v.) Old English stridan (past tense strad, past participle striden), "to straddle, mount" (a horse), from Proto-Germanic *stridanan (source also of Middle Low German strede "stride, strive;" Old Saxon stridian, Danish stride, Swedish strida "to fight," Dutch strijden, Old High German stritan, German etreiten "to fight, contend, struggle," Old Norse striðr "strong, hard, stubborn, severe").
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