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    pave the way for
  2. Jan 30, 2014 · As anongoodnurse's answer notes, the standard idiom is "pave the way." Here is the brief entry for that expression in Christine Ammer, The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms, second edition (2013): pave the way Make progress or development easier, as in Her findings paved the way for developing a new vaccine. This expression alludes to ...

  3. Oct 11, 2011 · The meaning is simply making a choice between Automation vs Transformation. Automation does the same thing better. Transformation changes the way that things are done. The connections to the Sam Foss poem and Regis McKenna are in my opinion the closest answers. Clayton Christiansen also touched on this in his "The Innovator's Dilemma".

  4. May 10, 2024 · Starting from that meaning, it can potentially also be used in a figurative sense, such as in 'Go ahead, I'm much slower than you, I'll meet you at the answer.'. Can 'to go ahead', with the meaning explained above (literal of figurative), ever imply 'to pave the way' for a party other than the subject of 'to go ahead' itself?

  5. Aug 9, 2023 · By the 21st century, the subculture meaning had become the dominant primary meaning, helping pave the way to homosexuality becoming acceptable and permitting medical, psychological, and scientific examination to begin to understand a far greater meaning of gender and gender preference.

  6. Apr 6, 2020 · Maverick (noun): If you describe someone as a maverick, you mean that they are unconventional and independent, and do not think or behave in the same way as other people. Example: He was too much of a maverick ever to hold high office. ━━━━ ━━━━

  7. Feb 15, 2011 · Becoming known to decision-makers in the organization means that you want to increase your visibility within your company, make people aware of you, and presumably pave the way to improve your position.

  8. Aug 24, 2013 · I was drawn to the expression, “the country has a ways to go in realizing the dream of Rev. King” because first, the infinitive article (a) doesn’t agree with plural noun (ways) in “a ways,” second, I’m unfamiliar with the case that “have a way to go” being used in the same sense of having a lot of work to do as “have a long way to go,” which I’m familar with.

  9. Nov 30, 2017 · It holds the nuance of predicting future events by utilizing and showcasing physical examples of objects and/or actions that will happen in the future, pave the way of the future or set a new standard for the future.

  10. Mar 13, 2019 · I suggest that since "helped paved" is probably always followed by "the", then given that the spoken utterance "helped paved the" is almost indistinguishable from from "helped pave the", that the grammatically wrong form has always sounded (more or less) correct.

  11. Mar 3, 2015 · The phrase connotes preparation, in such a way as to make the subsequent activities easier. Definitions are available various places (e.g., The Free Dictionary, Askville). The latter suggests a derivation (or derivative) "skid row" without citation.

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