cadence
Definitions
noun
The act or state of declining or sinking.
Now was the sun in western cadence low.
The measure or beat of movement.
Getting into a good jigging rhythm means making short quick jerks in a regular cadence that might average about one jerk every 1.5 to 2 seconds.
Balanced, rhythmic flow.
You find not the apostrophas, and so miss the accent: let me supervise the canzonet. Here are only numbers ratified; but, for the elegancy, facility, and golden cadence of poesy, caret.
Night has now passed in the Saudi desert and as we hear from Nightline correspondent Forrest Sawyer, the normal cadence of life at the front is about to change.
The general inflection or modulation of the voice, or of any sound.
Blustering winds, which all night long / Had roused the sea, now with hoarse cadence lull / Seafaring men o'erwatched.
The accents […] were in passion's tenderest cadence.
A progression of at least two chords which conclude a piece of music, section or musical phrases within it. Sometimes referred to analogously as musical punctuation.
verb
To give a cadence to.
there was besides, in an already dominating and growing element, a motive that was stronger and more enduring than enthusiasm —an implacable antagonism which acted side by side with the cause of the Union as a perpetual impelling force against the social conditions of the South, controlling the counsels of the government, and cadencing the march of its armies to the chorus: John Brown's body lies mouldering in the grave, But his soul is marching on!
In this march to the City of the Dead," scores upon scores of the best musical organizations of the nation were in line, whose funeral dirges cadenced' the great wail of a bereft people.
To give structure to.
It was the Exile, however, which cadenced the rhythm of Jewish existence
They are neither mentioned specifically in the Constitution, nor in the Federalist Papers that cadenced the nationalist debates.
name
A female given name from English.