rhythm
[ rith-uhm ]
/ ˈrɪð əm /
noun
Origin of rhythm
1550–60; < Latin
rhythmus < Greek
rhythmós; compare
rheîn to flow
OTHER WORDS FROM rhythm
rhythm·less, adjective non·rhythm, nounWORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH rhythm
rhyme rhythmWords nearby rhythm
Example sentences from the Web for rhythm
British Dictionary definitions for rhythm
rhythm
/ (ˈrɪðəm) /
noun
- the arrangement of the relative durations of and accents on the notes of a melody, usually laid out into regular groups (bars) of beats, the first beat of each bar carrying the stress
- any specific arrangement of such groupings; timequadruple rhythm
(in poetry)
- the arrangement of words into a more or less regular sequence of stressed and unstressed or long and short syllables
- any specific such arrangement; metre
(in painting, sculpture, architecture, etc) a harmonious sequence or pattern of masses alternating with voids, of light alternating with shade, of alternating colours, etc
any sequence of regularly recurring functions or events, such as the regular recurrence of certain physiological functions of the body, as the cardiac rhythm of the heartbeat
Derived forms of rhythm
rhythmless, adjectiveWord Origin for rhythm
C16: from Latin
rhythmus, from Greek
rhuthmos; related to
rhein to flow
Medical definitions for rhythm
rhythm
[ rĭð′əm ]
n.
Movement or variation characterized by the regular recurrence or alternation of different quantities or conditions, as in the heartbeat.