(strode, strid.den)

listen to the pronunciation of (strode, strid.den)
Türkisch - Englisch
{f} stride
A long step
To walk with long steps
{v} to make long steps, open the legs wide, cross
spacing between regularly-spaced points in a domain For example, the set of points a, a+2, a+4, …, b-2, b is specified by [a,b] with stride 2 It is a domain See Also: range, interval, domain
A stride is a long step which you take when you are walking or running. With every stride, runners hit the ground with up to five times their body-weight He walked with long strides
the distance covered by a step; "he stepped off ten paces from the old tree and began to dig"
If you stride somewhere, you walk there with quick, long steps. They were joined by a newcomer who came striding across a field He turned abruptly and strode off down the corridor
walk with long steps; "He strode confidently across the hall"
walk with long steps; "He strode confidently across the hall
To pass over at a step; to step over
The distance between the memory addresses of array elements that are touched in a loop A stride-one loop touches successive array elements, and hence scans memory consecutively This uses cache memory most efficiently because all of a cache line is used before the next cache line is fetched, and the loop never returns to a cache line after using it Strides greater than one are less efficient in memory use, but are easy to create accidentally given Fortran array semantics The compiler can sometimes use loop nest optimization or loop interchange to shorten the stride
Sign cut measurement from tip of toe of one normal walking step to back of heel of the next successive step
cover or traverse by taking long steps; "She strode several miles towards the woods"
In British English, if you take a problem or difficulty in your stride, you deal with it calmly and easily. The American expression is take something in stride. Beth was struck by how Naomi took the mistake in her stride. strode stridden to walk quickly with long steps march stride across/into/down etc
Trousers
If you get into your stride or hit your stride, you start to do something easily and confidently, after being slow and uncertain. The campaign is just getting into its stride
(n ) the increment specified in a subscript triplet
System To Retrieve Information from Drug Evidence, a program of the Drug Enforcement Administration
If you make strides in something that you are doing, you make rapid progress in it. The country has made enormous strides politically but not economically
(strode, strid.den)
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