Idiom
Make tracks.
To leave a place to go somewhere.
Exact(16)
Mark James, of PwC's anti-counterfeiting team, said: "The digital economy and global supply chains have made tracking counterfeit goods and measuring their economic damage fiendishly complex".
The chief technology officer apparently had been living off the grid, which made tracking him down almost impossible even with the help of the authorities.
Mr. Romankow has made tracking gang members a key component of the force, and estimates that several hundred live in Elizabeth.
Despite the international outcry over the kidnapping of 276 female students at a secondary school in Chibok, Borno State, on 14 April, little progress has been made tracking down most of the girls.
The Bronx Museum show includes sombre, astonishingly adept self-portraits that Wong made, tracking his growth and his change, until shortly after he graduated from public high school, in 1964.
The security services have made tracking British jihadists fighting in the region their top priority after a video emerged showing Britons filmed in Syria urging UK Muslims to join insurgents there and in Iraq.
Similar(43)
We made tracks, noiseless tracks.
But that's the nature of a charmer - to make you think you've made tracks.
Two lions had been spotted a short distance away and Ahmed made tracks.
"The groom!" they shouted, but no further revelry followed; he quickly made tracks to another part of the restaurant.
The race had to be red-flagged near its halfway point after heavy rain made track conditions unsafe.
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