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syncopate
[ sing-kuh-peyt, sin- ]
verb (used with object)
- Music.
- to place (the accents) on beats that are normally unaccented.
- to treat (a passage, piece, etc.) in this way.
- Grammar. to contract (a word) by omitting one or more sounds from the middle, as in reducing Gloucester to Gloster.
syncopate
/ 藞蝉瑟艐办蓹藢辫别瑟迟 /
verb
- music to modify or treat (a beat, rhythm, note, etc) by syncopation
- to shorten (a word) by omitting sounds or letters from the middle
Derived Forms
- 藞蝉测苍肠辞藢辫补迟辞谤, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 蝉测苍顎僣辞路辫补顎卼辞谤 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of syncopate1
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of syncopate1
Example Sentences
Glenn also performed an a capella version of 鈥淒eep River,鈥 his syncopated low voice and skilled falsetto moving the entire room into snaps, whistles and screams.
Eva Slater鈥檚 1954 鈥淕alaxy鈥 insets a syncopated network of painted forms within a wooden panel, merging optical motion with material stasis.
The staging, which can seem cluttered and breathless in the early going, traipses through these seedy locales with a theatrical swiftness that captures the milieu that bred the syncopated rhythm of the Jazz Age.
Each one鈥檚 momentary glow pulses alive and fades in syncopated rhythm with the drowsy croaks of bullfrogs.
He brought an ensemble to the elegant Appel Room theater, overlaying syncopated backbeats, heralding horn lines and tapestries of Rhodes and distorted guitar.
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