rhythm
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 17
- Words With Friends
- 15
- Letters
- 6
Definition of rhythm
9 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included
noun
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(countable, uncountable)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.”
“Hicks is both thwarter and thwartee of Daedalean plots. Aboard a train, the rhythm of the wheels sounds to him like "wottachump, wottachump, wottachump."”
See all 9 definitions Show less
noun
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(countable, uncountable)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.”
“Hicks is both thwarter and thwartee of Daedalean plots. Aboard a train, the rhythm of the wheels sounds to him like "wottachump, wottachump, wottachump."”
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(countable, uncountable)A specifically defined pattern of such variation.
“Most dances have a rhythm as distinctive as the Iambic verse in poetry”
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(countable, uncountable)A flow, repetition or regularity.
“Once you get the rhythm of it, the job will become easy.”
“Will this decision-making paralysis continue until Great British Railways has been established and settled into a new rhythm? If so, passengers on the West of England line are in for a rough ride, as the reliability of these tired old British Rail trains inevitably declines, and maintenance costs rise.”
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(countable, uncountable)The tempo or speed of a beat, song or repetitive event.
“We walked with a quick, even rhythm.”
“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, […]”
“Bigeminous rhythm was followed by bursts of extrasystoles.”
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(countable, uncountable)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”
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(countable, uncountable)A regular quantitative change in a variable (notably natural) process.
“The rhythm of the seasons dominates agriculture as well as wildlife”
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(countable, uncountable)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”
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(countable, uncountable)A person's natural feeling for rhythm.
“That girl's got rhythm, watch her dance!”
“I'm never gonna dance again / Guilty feet have got no rhythm”
verb
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(transitive)To impart a (particular) rhythm to.
“The pamphlet, writes Muray, 'is the supremely affirmative form in which nothing can be turned around, rhythmed or played with in synonyms and rhymes'.”
“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.”
“ISP places are, therefore, not only considered places of teaching and learning performances (see point 4): the different locations rhythmed the entire programme.”
“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.”
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *ser-? Proto-Indo-European *srew- Proto-Indo-European *sru-dʰ-mo-s Proto-Hellenic *hrutʰmós Ancient Greek ῥῠθμός (rhŭthmós)bor. Latin rhythmusder. English rhythm First coined in 1557, from Latin rhythmus, from Ancient Greek ῥυθμός (rhuthmós, “any measured flow or movement, symmetry, rhythm”), from ῥέω (rhéō, “to flow, run, stream, gush”).
Words you can make from rhythm
5 playable · top: MYTH (12 pts)
Best play myth 12 points3-letter words
2 words2-letter words
2 wordsHooks
1 extension · 1 back
A single letter you can add to rhythm to make another valid word.
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Find your best play with rhythm
See every word you can make from a set of letters that includes rhythm, or browse word lists you can mine for high-scoring plays.