<noun.act> the union's support had been in lockstep for years
a manner of marching in file in which each person's leg moves with and behind the corresponding leg of the person ahead
<noun.act> the prisoner's ankles were so chained together that they could only march in lockstep
"The bond market is continuing to move in lockstep with the dollar," said Rudolf Thunberg, an economist at Ried Thunberg & Co., a Westport, Conn. investment research firm.
Petroleum-product prices moved in lockstep with crude, though they didn't come off as much.
He said the vote showed "all black people do not walk in lockstep with what Coleman Young says," said Barrow, who like Young is black.
And we're not _ as I said over in London, Helen, we're not urging everybody to march in lockstep.
But Mr. Belkin's study is noteworthy not so much because markets repeat themselves in lockstep, but because the behavior of people who participate in markets does tend to recur.
"No one ever says the DFL does things in lockstep," said Humphrey, a former state senator and attorney general since 1983.
Through a radical restructuring spanning less than a decade, Big Oil has abandoned the days when profits moved in lockstep with oil prices.