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slow time
slow time
noun
- military a slow marching pace, usually 65 or 75 paces to the minute: used esp in funeral ceremonies
Word History and Origins
Origin of slow time1
Example Sentences
The biggest surge came over the first three days of the blazes, when average daily rates in the area’s luxury hotels jumped by 22.7% over last year — a rise that may have been driven by evacuees moving into high-priced suites during what is normally a slow time, the company’s senior director of analytics Isaac Collazo said.
“Traffic was going slow, time felt like it was moving so slow” on their way back to the sitter, Sidhu said.
We opted for a 16-hour overnight trip instead of a two-hour flight to Albuquerque because we longed for a different way of traveling, one we hoped would slow time in our busy lives.
Between the expansive landscape, cheaper-than-L.A. studio space and the small-town feel, the desert offers the experience of slow time — which can help some artists tap into a flow state without the day-to-day distraction of city living.
Ballard, in which a wealthy Count and Countess live in a walled villa encrusted by a garden of crystal flowers, each of which can slow time when plucked.
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