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Rhythm   /rˈɪðəm/   Listen
Rhythm

noun
1.
The basic rhythmic unit in a piece of music.  Synonyms: beat, musical rhythm.  "The conductor set the beat"
2.
Recurring at regular intervals.  Synonym: regular recurrence.
3.
An interval during which a recurring sequence of events occurs.  Synonyms: cycle, round.
4.
The arrangement of spoken words alternating stressed and unstressed elements.  Synonym: speech rhythm.
5.
Natural family planning in which ovulation is assumed to occur 14 days before the onset of a period (the fertile period would be assumed to extend from day 10 through day 18 of her cycle).  Synonyms: calendar method, calendar method of birth control, rhythm method, rhythm method of birth control.



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"Rhythm" Quotes from Famous Books



... where amusements are still going on; here and there, from the somber gardens, the sound of a guitar reaches our ears, some dance giving in its weird rhythm ...
— Madame Chrysantheme • Pierre Loti

... bells, the merry Christmas bells, Their music all our pleasure tells. (Repeat, singing tra la la whenever necessary to give the rhythm. They pause in groups in center, right, and left; some sit, others stand, and change their positions ...
— Christmas Entertainments • Alice Maude Kellogg

... hanging about a cottage in the Place du Vier Prison. He had hoped to loiter in a doorway there, and to empty his sailor's heart in well-practised admiration before the altar of village beauty. The sight of Guida's face the day before had given a poignant pulse to his emotions, unlike the broken rhythm of past comedies of sentiment and melodramas of passion. According to all logic of custom, the acuteness of yesterday's impression should have been followed up by today's attack; yet here he was, like another Robinson Crusoe, "kicking ...
— The Judgment House • Gilbert Parker

... composed, and to which I have attached a great many emotions and extraneous incidents known to nobody but myself. My old poetic favourites have been lying in various corners of my brain for forty or fifty years; I know every turn, rhyme and rhythm of them; and as they have served my need and alleviated my sorrow so long, I do not intend to give them many fellow-lodgers more. I do not know at what particular time literary nausea sets in, but Solomon had ...
— Literary Tours in The Highlands and Islands of Scotland • Daniel Turner Holmes

... For example, the dance of the Furies, so represented, would create complete terror among those who witnessed them. The Greek philosopher, Aristotle, ranked dancing with poetry, and said that certain dancers, with rhythm applied to gesture, could express manners, passions, and actions. The most eminent Greek sculptors studied the attitude of the dancers for their art of imitating the passions. In a classical Greek song, Apollo, one of the twelve greater gods, the son of ...
— Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes • J. M. Judy


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