rhythmic

listen to the pronunciation of rhythmic
English - Turkish
{s} uyumlu
{s} ritmik

Ritmik jimnastik kızlar için güzel bir spordur. - Rhythmic gymnastics is a beautiful sport for girls.

Çocuklar çok genç yaştan itibaren ritmik seslere cevap vermeyi öğrenirler. - Children learn to respond to rhythmical sounds from a very young age.

dizemli
(Tıp) Düzenli, ritmik
düzünlü
rhythmic pattern
ritmik model
rhythmic gymnast
(Spor) Ritmik jimnastikçi
rhythmically
ritmik olarak
rhythmical
uyumlu
rhythmical
ölçülü
rhythmical
{s} ritmik

Çocuklar çok genç yaştan itibaren ritmik seslere cevap vermeyi öğrenirler. - Children learn to respond to rhythmical sounds from a very young age.

rhythmical
{s} ritmik, tartımlı, dizemli; tartımsal, dizemsel
rhythmical
(sıfat) ritmik
rhythmical
tartımsal
rhythmical
düzünsel
rhythmical
tartımlı
English - English
Characterized by rhythm
Written in verse, especially rhyming verse
Of or relating to rhythm
With regular, repetitive motion or sound
{s} having a regular beat
A rhythmic movement or sound is repeated at regular intervals, forming a regular pattern or beat. Good breathing is slow, rhythmic and deep. + rhythmically rhyth·mi·cal·ly She stood, swaying her hips, moving rhythmically. having a strong rhythm
recurring with measured regularity; "the rhythmic chiming of church bells"- John Galsworthy; "rhythmical prose"
Pertaining to, or of the nature of, rhythm
rhythmical
rhythmic gesture
A durational pattern which does not occupy a whole number of pulses on an underlying metric level
rhythmic gymnastics
A discipline of gymnastics where the gymnast manipulates one of five apparatuses (ribbon, ball, rope, clubs, hoop) in a rhythmic manner
rhythmic unit
A durational pattern which occupies a period of time equal to a pulse or pulses on an underlying metric level
rhythmic gymnastics
(Spor) Rhythmic gymnastics is a sport in which individuals or teams of 2 or more manipulate one or two pieces of apparatus: clubs, hoop, ball, ribbon and Free (no apparatus)
rhythmic sportive gymnastics
Athletic competition related to gymnastics and dance in which participants, individually or in groups, perform exercise routines with the aid of hand apparatuses such as ropes, hoops, balls, clubs, and ribbons. In scoring points, artistry counts more than acrobatics. The sport dates from the 18th century. Though some gymnasts participated at the Olympic Games from 1948 to 1956, not until 1984 did it become an official Olympic competitive event
rhythmical
{a} harmonious, musical, fine
rhythmical
Pertaining to, or of the nature of, rhythm recurring with measured regularity; "the rhythmic chiming of church bells"- John Galsworthy; "rhythmical prose
rhythmical
{s} having a regular beat
rhythmically
in a rhythmic manner; "the chair rocked rhythmically back and forth
rhythmically
with reference to rhythm
rhythmically
In a rhythmical manner
rhythmically
with a regular beat, in the manner of having a cadence
rhythmic

    Hyphenation

    rhyth·mic

    Turkish pronunciation

    rîdhmîk

    Pronunciation

    /ˈrəᴛʜmək/ /ˈrɪðmɪk/

    Etymology

    () From Ancient Greek ῥύθμικος (rhythmikos), from ῥυθμός (rhuthmos, “measured flow or movement, symmetry, rhythm”) ῥέω (rheō, “flow, run, stream, gush”), + adjective suffix -ικος (-ikos).
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