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Definition of rhythm
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of rhythm is as below...
Rhythm
(n.) The
harmonious
flow of vocal
sounds.
Lern More About Rhythm
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Sphygmophone
::
Sphygmophone
(n.) An
electrical
instrument
for
determining
by the ear the
rhythm
of the pulse of a
person
at a
distance.
Cadence
::
Cadence
(n.) A
rhythmical
modulation
of the voice or of any
sound;
as, music of bells in
cadence
sweet..
Rhythmical
::
Rhythmical
(a.)
Pertaining
to, or of the
nature
of,
rhythm.
Rhythm
::
Rhythm
(n.) The
harmonious
flow of vocal
sounds.
Mastersinger
::
Mastersinger
(n.) One of a class of poets which
flourished
in
Nuremberg
and some other
cities
of
Germany
in the 15th and 16th
centuries.
They bound
themselves
to
observe
certain
arbitrary
laws of
rhythm.
Dance
::
Dance (v. i.) To move with
measured
steps,
or to a
musical
accompaniment;
to go
through,
either
alone or in
company
with
others,
with a
regulated
succession
of
movements,
(commonly)
to the sound of
music;
to trip or leap
rhythmically..
Arhizal
::
Arhizal
(a.) Alt. of
Arhythmou.
Suiting
::
Suite (n.) One of the old
musical
forms,
before
the time of the more
compact
sonata,
consisting
of a
string
or
series
of
pieces
all in the same key,
mostly
in
various
dance
rhythms,
with
sometimes
an
elaborate
prelude.
Some
composers
of the
present
day
affect
the suite
form..
Rhythm
::
Rhythm
(n.) A
division
of lines into short
portions
by a
regular
succession
of arses and
theses,
or
percussions
and
remissions
of voice on words or
syllables..
Movement
::
Movement
(n.) The
rhythmical
progression,
pace, and tempo of a
piece..
Rhythm
::
Rhythm
(n.)
Movement
in
musical
time, with
periodical
recurrence
of
accent;
the
measured
beat or pulse which marks the
character
and
expression
of the
music;
symmetry
of
movement
and
accent..
Halt
::
Halt (a.) To have an
irregular
rhythm;
to be
defective.
Tone
::
Tone (n.) A
whining
style of
speaking;
a kind of
mournful
or
artificial
strain
of
voice;
an
affected
speaking
with a
measured
rhythm
ahd a
regular
rise and fall of the
voice;
as,
children
often read with a
tone..
Heart
::
Heart (n.) A
hollow,
muscular
organ,
which,
by
contracting
rhythmically,
keeps up the
circulation
of the
blood..
Syncope
::
Syncopation
(n.) The act of
syncopating;
a
peculiar
figure
of
rhythm,
or
rhythmical
alteration,
which
consists
in
welding
into one tone the
second
half of one beat with the first half of the beat which
follows..
Stich
::
Stich (n.) A line in the
Scriptures;
specifically
(Hebrew
Scriptures),
one of the
rhythmic
lines in the
poetical
books and
passages
of the Old
Treatment,
as
written
in the
oldest
Hebrew
manuscripts
and in the
Revised
Version
of the
English
Bible..
Poetical
::
Poetical
(a.)
Expressed
in
metrical
form;
exhibiting
the
imaginative
or the
rhythmical
quality
of
poetry;
as, a
poetical
composition;
poetical
prose..
Fontanel
::
Fontanel
(n.) One of the
membranous
intervals
between
the
incompleted
angles
of the
parietal
and
neighboring
bones of a fetal or young
skull;
-- so
called
because
it
exhibits
a
rhythmical
pulsation.
Metre
::
Metre (n.)
Rhythmical
arrangement
of
syllables
or words into
verses,
stanzas,
strophes,
etc.;
poetical
measure,
depending
on
number,
quantity,
and
accent
of
syllables;
rhythm;
measure;
verse;
also, any
specific
rhythmical
arrangements;
as, the
Horatian
meters;
a
dactylic
meter..
Prose
::
Prose (n.) The
ordinary
language
of men in
speaking
or
writing;
language
not cast in
poetical
measure
or
rhythm;
--
contradistinguished
from
verse,
or
metrical
composition..
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