pace

/peɪs/ (bre, ipa) · [pˈes] /peɪs/ (ame, ipa) · [pˈes] /ˈpās/ (ame, mw)

pace — noun

  • pacesingular
  • pacesplural

1. the rate at which a person walks or runs, a vehicle travels, or a process develo

1.名詞B1
釋義

the rate at which a person walks or runs, a vehicle travels, or a process develops over time

例句

The construction work continued at a steady pace despite the rain.

collocation: steady pace

Faisal was amazed by the pace at which Yumi learned to read music.

structure: the pace at which + clause

同義詞
  • speed

    more direct and measurable; better for exact measurements like kilometres per hour

  • rate

    emphasises comparison or proportion; common in statistics and finance

  • tempo

    borrowed from music; used for the rhythm of life, work, or activities

文法句型

at a [adj] pace

the pace of [sth]

用法筆記

Often occurs with 'at' in the structure 'at a [adjective] pace' or 'at the pace of [something]'. The expression 'at one's own pace' is a very common fixed phrase.

常見錯誤

The machine can produce boxes at a high speed pace.
The machine can produce boxes at a high speed.
💡'speed' and 'pace' overlap in meaning; do not use them together.
The pace of the car was 100 kilometres per hour.
The speed of the car was 100 kilometres per hour.
💡'pace' is better for ongoing movement or progress, not for a directly measured number.

2. the manner or style of walking or running described in a phrase with 'at', such

2.名詞B1
釋義

the manner or style of walking or running described in a phrase with 'at', such as 'at a brisk pace' (walking quickly with energy) or 'at a slow pace' — this is not about measuring speed as a number, but about how someone moves in a particular way

例句

The hikers set off at a brisk pace along the mountain trail.

collocation: brisk pace for walking

Gabriel slowed his pace when he reached the patch of ice on the path.

同義詞
  • step

    refers to a single foot movement, not the overall speed

  • gait

    describes the style or pattern of walking rather than speed

文法句型

at a [adj] pace

3. the speed at which a process, change, or situation develops or moves forward, of

3.名詞B2
釋義

the speed at which a process, change, or situation develops or moves forward, often described with adjectives such as 'rapid', 'fast', or 'slow'

例句

The housing market has grown at a remarkable pace over the last five years.

Ryo found it difficult to keep up with the pace of change in the advertising industry.

collocation: pace of change

同義詞
  • speed

    broader and more direct; can be used in both physical and abstract contexts

  • rate

    more neutral; common in formal and statistical writing

文法句型

at a [adj] pace

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 2 (AT A BRISK PACE): sense 2 is for physical walking or running, while this sense is for abstract processes and rates of change.

常見錯誤

The runner set off at a rapid pace.
The runner set off at a brisk pace.
💡'rapid pace' is for abstract processes; use 'brisk pace' for physical walking or running.

4. one single movement of your foot forward or backward when walking or running, or

4.名詞B1
釋義

one single movement of your foot forward or backward when walking or running, or the distance that this movement covers

例句

Hana took two paces forward and stopped directly in front of the door.

collocation: take [number] paces

The distance between the two oak trees was roughly fifty paces across the field.

同義詞
  • step

    interchangeable in most contexts; 'step' is more common in everyday English

  • stride

    a long, confident step, suggesting more purposeful movement

用法筆記

Can be used as a rough unit of measurement in informal contexts — one pace is approximately 75 centimetres or 30 inches, roughly equal to a natural step.

常見錯誤

He walked ten paces away from the building, each pace exactly one metre.
He walked ten paces away from the building.
💡A pace is not an exact unit; avoid treating it as precisely one metre.

5. the act of running, cycling, or moving faster in a race or competition to force

5.名詞B2
釋義

the act of running, cycling, or moving faster in a race or competition to force other participants to increase their speed, or more generally, setting a standard that others try to match

例句

Élise set a punishing pace from the start and left the other runners far behind.

collocation: set a punishing pace

The company's research laboratory sets the pace for innovation in the solar energy industry.

同義詞
  • lead

    simpler and broader; does not carry the specific competitive pressure that 'set the pace' implies

  • front-runner

    a noun describing the person or team in the lead

文法句型

set the pace

用法筆記

When used literally in sports, 'set the pace' means running at the front. When used figuratively, it refers to being a leader or trendsetter in any field.

6. in the sport of football (soccer), a player's or team's ability to run fast whil

6.名詞B2
釋義

in the sport of football (soccer), a player's or team's ability to run fast while keeping control of the ball

例句

The winger's pace caused constant problems for the opposing defence throughout the match.

collocation: [player]'s pace

Folake used her pace to reach the through-ball before the goalkeeper could clear it.

同義詞
  • speed

    more general; 'pace' in football specifically implies combining speed with ball control

用法筆記

This sense is almost exclusively used in British football commentary and analysis. 'Pace' in this context specifically means running speed with the ball, not without it.

pace — verb

pace — preposition