Exact(1)
He played two piano solos, "Sweet Georgia Brown" and "Django," and they were bereavement itself: spare, light in their left-hand chords, rather classical but moving among rubato, a slow stride and quietly driving, even four-beat sections.
Similar(59)
At sixty-two, France still has the slow stride and observant manner of a former beat cop.
With tighter tissues, older runners are constrained to choppy strides and, in general, a slower pace.
The heat played a large part in this but, crucially, as I had begun to converse in the language, I had started to adopt a slower pace to my speech and my frenetic British stride had slowed down to keep time with my new language.
Walk straight up, chest out a little, shoulders back, and take moderately long but slow strides, like you're Somebody.
Johnny took a slow slide into the job before hitting his stride.
Having made "slow strides" in getting girls to play, the climb to softball enlightenment remains uphill.
Tom Carlisle, Pixar's facilities director, made long, slow strides as he wound his way around the exterior of the building.
The wrist-circling slow lifts of the arms, the slow strides with knees now bent, now straight, the range of heel-and-toe steps slow or fast, the sudden claps and slaps, a number of statuesque gestures: she takes these and turns them into sheer music drama.
McAfee says that this increase in usage, combined with "historically fragile cellular infrastructure and slow strides toward encryption," will put user data on mobile phones at high risk for an attack.
News commentators noted that Reagan's step had slowed significantly, as the following month she walked in very slow strides with John McCain.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com