stride
See also: stridé
English
Pronunciation
- enPR: strīd, IPA(key): /stɹaɪd/
Audio (US) (file)
Etymology 1
From Old English stridan (“to stride”), from Proto-Germanic *strīdaną.[1] Cognate with Low German striden (“to fight, to stride”), Dutch strijden (“to fight”), German streiten (“to fight, to quarrel”).
Verb
stride (third-person singular simple present strides, present participle striding, simple past strode, past participle stridden or strode or strid)
- (intransitive) To walk with long steps.
- Dryden
- Mars in the middle of the shining shield / Is graved, and strides along the liquid field.
- Dryden
- To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle.
- To pass over at a step; to step over.
- Shakespeare
- a debtor that not dares to stride a limit
- Shakespeare
- To straddle; to bestride.
- Shakespeare
- I mean to stride your steed.
- Shakespeare
Usage notes
Translations
to walk with long steps
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Etymology 2
See the above verb.
Noun
stride (plural strides)
- A long step.
- 1907, Harold Bindloss, chapter 7, in The Dust of Conflict:
- Still, a dozen men with rifles, and cartridges to match, stayed behind when they filed through a white aldea lying silent amid the cane, and the Sin Verguenza swung into slightly quicker stride.
- 2011 November 10, Jeremy Wilson, “England Under 21 5 Iceland Under 21 0: match report”, in Telegraph:
- An utterly emphatic 5-0 victory was ultimately capped by two wonder strikes in the last two minutes from Aston Villa midfielder Gary Gardner. Before that, England had utterly dominated to take another purposeful stride towards the 2013 European Championship in Israel. They have already established a five-point buffer at the top of Group Eight.
-
- (computing) The number of memory locations between successive elements in an array, pixels in a bitmap, etc.
- 2007, Andy Oram, Greg Wilson, Beautiful code
- This stride value is generally equal to the pixel width of the bitmap times the number of bytes per pixel, but for performance reasons it might be rounded […]
- 2007, Andy Oram, Greg Wilson, Beautiful code
- (music) A jazz piano style of the 1920s and 1930s. The left hand characteristically plays a four-beat pulse with a single bass note, octave, seventh or tenth interval on the first and third beats, and a chord on the second and fourth beats.
Derived terms
- astride
- bestride
- break stride
- get into one's stride
- strided
- strides (Australian, plural only)
- take something in one’s stride
- take something in stride
Translations
References
Anagrams
Italian
Verb
stride
- third-person singular present indicative of stridere
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
strīde
- second-person singular present active imperative of strīdō
Norwegian Bokmål
Alternative forms
Etymology
Verb
stride (imperative strid, present tense strider, passive strides, simple past stred or strei or stridde, past participle stridd, present participle stridende)
References
- “stride” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Adjective
stride
Swedish
Adjective
stride
- absolute definite natural masculine form of strid.
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