rhythm
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]First coined in 1557, from Latin rhythmus, from Ancient Greek ῥυθμός (rhuthmós, “any measured flow or movement, symmetry, rhythm”), from ῥέω (rhéō, “I flow, run, stream, gush”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]rhythm (countable and uncountable, plural rhythms)
- The variation of strong and weak elements (such as duration, accent) of sounds, notably in speech or music, over time; a beat or meter.
- Dance to the rhythm of the music.
- A specifically defined pattern of such variation.
- Most dances have a rhythm as distinctive as the Iambic verse in poetry
- A flow, repetition or regularity.
- Once you get the rhythm of it, the job will become easy.
- The tempo or speed of a beat, song or repetitive event.
- We walked with a quick, even rhythm.
- 1872, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Poetry and Imagination:
- If you hum or whistle the rhythm of the common English metres,— of the decasyllabic quatrain, or the octosyllabic with alternate sexisyllabic, or other rhythms, […]
- 1967, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, New York:
- Bigeminous rhythm was followed by bursts of extrasystoles.
- The musical instruments which provide rhythm (mainly; not or less melody) in a musical ensemble.
- The Baroque term basso continuo is virtually equivalent to rhythm
- A regular quantitative change in a variable (notably natural) process.
- The rhythm of the seasons dominates agriculture as well as wildlife
- Controlled repetition of a phrase, incident or other element as a stylistic figure in literature and other narrative arts; the effect it creates.
- The running gag is a popular rhythm in motion pictures and theater comedy
- A person's natural feeling for rhythm.
- That girl's got rhythm, watch her dance!
Synonyms
[edit]- meter / metre
- prosody
- (instruments providing rhythm) rhythm section
Derived terms
[edit]- battle rhythm
- biorhythm
- circadian rhythm
- counterrhythm
- cross-rhythm
- dysrhythmia
- escape rhythm
- homorhythm
- isorhythm
- Lombardic rhythm
- Lombard rhythm
- plagiarhythm
- polyrhythm
- poly-rhythm
- rhythmal
- rhythm and blues
- rhythm and grime
- rhythm band
- rhythm box
- rhythmed
- rhythmer
- rhythm game
- rhythm guitar
- rhythmic
- rhythmical
- rhythming
- rhythmise
- rhythmite
- rhythmless
- rhythm method
- rhythmogenetic
- rhythmology
- rhythmometer
- rhythm pole
- rhythm royal
- rhythm stick
- sinus rhythm
- tachyrhythmia
- theta rhythm
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]variation of strong and weak elements of sounds over time
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tempo or speed of a beat, song, or repeated event
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rhythm section — see rhythm section
flow, repetition or regularity
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Verb
[edit]rhythm (third-person singular simple present rhythms, present participle rhythming, simple past and past participle rhythmed)
- (transitive) To impart a (particular) rhythm to.
- 1987, Ian Noble, Language and Narration in Céline’s Writings, page 194:
- The pamphlet, writes Muray, 'is the supremely affirmative form in which nothing can be turned around, rhythmed or played with in synonyms and rhymes'.
- 2017, Robert Hassan, The Age of Distraction:
- And so the microchip, say, reflects a certain electronically driven speed of society, just as the invention of a flint axe, reflected a society that was rhythmed fully by biological and environmental temporalities.
- 2021, Sónia Pedro Sebastião, Susana de Carvalho Spínola, Diplomacy, Organisations and Citizens, page 316:
- ISP places are, therefore, not only considered places of teaching and learning performances (see point 4): the different locations rhythmed the entire programme.
- 2024, Marie-Rose Cardat, Why I left my Hometown, page 184:
- rhythmed by a television show and a meal, as we grow older, things change. rhythmed by a baby's cry and school holidays, as we grow older, things change. rhythmed by monthly bills and a husband's envies, as we grow older, some things never change.
Categories:
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *srew-
- English terms derived from Latin
- English terms derived from Ancient Greek
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- Rhymes:English/ɪðəm
- Rhymes:English/ɪðəm/2 syllables
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