(1) Connected to each other, the destroyers could easily outpace a submarine and trap it.(2) Markets, as they will always do when given the chance, moved toward providing more goods at cheaper prices, and economic growth quickly began to outpace other Latin American economies.(3) salsa sales now outpace those for ketchup(4) Though progress has been made over the past decade, it has not been fast enough for economic growth to outpace population growth.(5) Now all that notwithstanding, the rapid one-time shift in population composition associated with the baby boom is projected to outpace increases in productivity growth.(6) The model suggests the Cretaceous landscape was filled with large, lumbering creatures that any human with a fast car or bike or maybe even a quick sprint could outpace .(7) The rise in the November surplus came despite a 19.4% rise in imports, a rate outpacing the 16.6% growth in exports.(8) The nanowire-derived ring oscillators reached a speed of 11.7 megahertz, outpacing by a factor of roughly 10,000 the excruciatingly slow performance attained by other nanomaterial circuits.(9) Current and capital accounts are in surplus and Asia's growth is outpacing the rest of the world, it said.(10) His latest came in the Winter Beach Run at Jacksonville where he outpaced three other area runners.(11) US exporters are under pressure to find more overseas customers as domestic production growth outpaces local demand for the fibre.(12) One in 10 Scottish jobs are in the financial industry and it has outpaced the growth of the Scottish economy by five times over the past five years.(13) The growth in the first six months of calendar year 2005 has far outpaced the rise in exports in the last calendar year.(14) Imagine two galaxies fleeing from each at a faster and faster rate, finally reaching a relative speed that outpaces light.(15) Despite a steady rise in such loans, they are not outpacing overall credit growth and their share remains within the norm.(16) We see second quarter growth outpacing the first quarter because private consumption and investment should catch up