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fast track

NOUN
  1. a rapid means of achieving a goal
    he took a fast track to the top of the corporate ladder
    the company went off the fast track when the stock market dropped
    they saw independence as the fast track to democracy

How To Use fast track In A Sentence

  • A genius who chucked the academic fast track for a tar paper cabin with no outhouse?
  • on the fast track in school
  • Many saw independence as the fast track to democracy.
  • His lead: “Attention White House speechwriters: The term fast track is no longer in vogue.” No Uncertain Terms
  • Agree to keep shtoom and you'll be on the fast track to promotion. Times, Sunday Times
  • The phrase fast track has a long history in horse racing, to mean “dry, conducive to speed.” No Uncertain Terms
  • On the other side, Tampa Bay's defense will have trouble stopping the Rams on the dome's fast track.
  • Speed is clearly a must for women on the fast track. Times, Sunday Times
  • Both of these psychometrics are ones I have encountered hardly at all in ELT and consistently in my work outside (for the National School of Government in training senior civil servants and for Bath University School of Management as a tutor on fast track executive MBA programmes). L is for Learning Styles « An A-Z of ELT
  • Many Croats and Slovenes saw independence as the fast track to democracy.
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