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fast track
1noun
a racetrack dry and hard enough for optimum speed.
a railroad track for express trains.
Informal., a situation or course of action that is intensely pressured or competitive, especially one in which a person advances rapidly to a higher level in a business or profession.
With two promotions in six months, he seems to have chosen the fast track.
fast-track
2[fast-trak, fahst-]
verb (used with or without object)
to advance or develop rapidly.
adjective
of or relating to the fast track.
fast-track
adjective
denoting the quickest or most direct route or system
fast-track executives
a fast-track procedure for libel claims
verb
(tr) to speed up the progress of (a project or person)
Other Word Forms
- fast-tracker noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of fast-track1
Idioms and Phrases
on a / the fast track,
advancing or being promoted more rapidly than usual, especially in business or other organizational positions.
an executive on the fast track.
expanding or being developed or handled rapidly and often innovatively.
a company on the fast track in computer technology.
Example Sentences
But Steve Smith, chief executive of refugee charity Care4Calais, said the ruling "made it clear that violent protest, and in many cases overt racism, is not a fast-track route for the far right to attack the rights of people seeking sanctuary in this country".
The plan involves creating new laws to fast-track people into detention and removal from the UK - and providing the legislation is correctly worded, there is nothing in principle to say that Parliament could not create such a scheme.
As part of the fast-track process, Intersect Power was required to enter into at least one so-called “community benefits agreement” with a local organization and to provide tangible benefits to the region.
And after significant local pushback, a developer that has been planning to build a lithium-ion battery storage facility on the site where Morro Bay’s iconic smokestacks stand pulled out of the municipal permitting process this spring, indicating it might pursue the state’s fast-track program.
Their fast-track appeal urged the justices to confirm that immigration agents have “reasonable suspicion” to stop and question Latinos who work in businesses or occupations that draw many undocumented workers.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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