shortenss the pace count. is the correct answer to Land Navigational questions
Lengthens the pace count
Gravity ! The source (or start) of a river is (usually) high up in a mountain or hill. As the water travels downhill, it combines with others - gradually widening and gathering pace.
Do the work at your own pace and don't try to rush.
a boat stays at a steady pace because there are two forces giving the same amount of force
You didn't say which meaning of the word you want to use. Pace can mean a step, a length of measurement, a horse's gait, a way of walking, or a rate of speed. As a verb, it can mean to walk, to stride back and forth, to advance at a particular rate, to train a horse to pace, to measure by counting your steps, or to control your speed.I'll just toss out some sentences with various meanings.I'll pace the floor until I hear how the surgery went.Pace yourself so you don't get too tired on the hike.He walked at a rapid pace.
jogging
Lengthens it
Pace Count
Measure they key, typically found near one of the corners. And then measure it and see how many kilometers/miles it is then measure the distance from your starting point to finishing point and compare it to the key
It is traveling at a pace of 124.3 miles per hour or 200km/h
Nature of load
a snake can swim about as fast as a row Boat at traveling comfortable pace
An advantage of traveling in a ship would include beautiful scenery, a change in pace, and less impact on the environment than traveling in a plane. A disadvantage of traveling in a ship might include the fact that ships travel very slowly.
A good way to measure ground distance is by pace count.
IT depends how fast you say it about 1 to 3 seconds in normal pace
find your pace distance... the distance you walk in one pace. in the military you count one pace for every time you left foot hits the ground. so step off with you left foot, right, left, and stop where your left foot is. find out how long between where you started and where you stopped and that's one pace.... then devide 1000 by that number and boom there is your pace count for a thousand meters.. give or take of course because every step isn't exactly the same.
That should not be too difficult. If you count at the relativerly leisurely pace of one count every 15 seconds, you'll get there in just a bit over 4 hours. At that rate, your main problem, I should think, would be in remembering from one count to the next where you've left off.
Fastest speed on what kind of bicycle, and under which conditions? With an UCI-approved bike, anything human-powered, downhill on a MTB, descending on a road bike, on the flat solo, on the flat behind a pace vehicle?