Chaced vs. Chased — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Chaced and Chased
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Compare with Definitions
Chaced
Simple past tense and past participle of chace
Chased
To follow rapidly in order to catch or overtake; pursue
The police officers chased the thief. The dog chased the cat across the yard.
Chased
To follow (game) in order to capture or kill; hunt
Chase foxes.
Chased
To seek the favor or company of persistently
Chased me until I agreed to a date.
Chased
To put to flight; drive
She chased the rabbits from the garden.
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Chased
To cause (an opposing pitcher) to be removed from a game by batting well.
Chased
To swing at and miss (a pitch, especially one out of the strike zone).
Chased
To go or follow in pursuit
My friends and I chased after the loose dog.
Chased
(Informal) To go hurriedly; rush
Chased all over looking for us.
Chased
To groove; indent.
Chased
To cut (the thread of a screw).
Chased
To decorate (metal) by engraving or embossing.
Chased
The act of chasing; pursuit
The police arrested the driver after a wild chase.
Chased
The hunting of game
The thrill of the chase.
Chased
Something that is hunted or pursued; quarry
The hunters drove their chase into the open.
Chased
A privately owned, unenclosed game preserve.
Chased
The right to hunt or keep game on the land of others.
Chased
A groove cut in an object; a slot
The chase for the quarrel on a crossbow.
Chased
A trench or channel for drainpipes or wiring.
Chased
The part of a gun in front of the trunnions.
Chased
The cavity of a mold.
Chased
Simple past tense and past participle of chase
Chased
A person who is being chased; as, better to be the chaser than the chased.
Chased
A person who is being chased;
The film jumped back and forth from the pursuer to the pursued
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