take in one's stride
1take in one's stride — To accomplish without undue effort or difficulty • • • Main Entry: ↑stride …
2take in (one's) stride — (Roget s IV) v. Syn. handle, do, manage; see achieve 1 , command 2 , perform 1 , succeed 1 …
3take something in one's stride (US also take something in stride) — deal with something difficult in a calm way. → stride …
4take something in one's stride — ► take something in one s stride deal with something difficult in a calm way. Main Entry: ↑stride …
5take something in one's stride — he seem to be taking the news in his stride Syn: deal with easily, cope with easily, not bat an eyelid …
6take something in one's stride — DEAL WITH EASILY, cope with easily, not bat an eyelid. → stride …
7stride — [strīd] vi. strode, stridden, striding [ME striden < OE stridan, akin to Ger streiten, to quarrel < IE * streidh < base * (s)ter , to be stiff, rigid > STARE, STARVE] 1. to walk with long steps, esp. in a vigorous or swaggering manner …
8stride — v. & n. v. (past strode; past part. stridden) 1 intr. & tr. walk with long firm steps. 2 tr. cross with one step. 3 tr. bestride; straddle. n. 1 a a single long step. b the length of this. 2 a person s gait as determined by the length of stride.… …
9stride — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. step, pace; progress, improvement. v. walk, march, step; straddle. See travel, motion. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. walk, pace, measured step; see gait 1 . • hit one s stride*, Syn. get up to normal, get… …
10take something in one's stride — verb Not to allow oneself to be set back, daunted, upset or embarrassed by unpleasant or undesirable circumstances …