|
Definition of Rhythmically
1. Adverb. In a rhythmic manner. "The chair rocked rhythmically back and forth"
Definition of Rhythmically
1. adv. In a rhythmical manner.
Definition of Rhythmically
1. Adverb. in a rhythmical manner ¹
2. Adverb. with reference to rhythm ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rhythmically
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rhythmically
Literary usage of Rhythmically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. University of Toronto Studies by University of Toronto (1900)
"V. REPRODUCTION OF COMPLEX rhythmically ARRANGED GROUPS OF INTERVALS. A further
series of experiments was undertaken ..."
2. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, George Walter Prothero, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle (1858)
"We urge those who think with us to give support and encouragement to the Arundel
Society. and rhythmically. By W. Sewell, BD 1850. -. The Odes of Horace, ..."
3. The Physiology of the Circulation in Plants, in the Lower Animals, and in by James Bell Pettigrew (1874)
"It is the blood within the muscular parietes of the heart which keeps it alive
and enables it to move rhythmically. Why does the Heart act rhythmically? ..."
4. The Physiology of the Circulation in Plants, in the Lower Animals, and in by James Bell Pettigrew (1874)
"It is the blood within the muscular parietes of the heart which keeps it alive
and enables it to move rhythmically. Why does the Heart act rhythmically? ..."
5. Catalogue of Stars Within Two Degrees of the North Pole Deduced from by Caroline Ellen Furness (1905)
"Then upon stimulating the disk in any manner it pulsates rhythmically. Disks which
have been cut, or pressed, as described above do not pulsate until they ..."
6. The Septonate and the Centralization of the Tonal System: A New View of the by Julius Klauser (1890)
"THE PRINCIPLE OF PROGRESSION, HARMONICALLY AND rhythmically CONSIDERED. I HAVE
stated that both harmony and rhythm enter into our percept of progressions ..."