cadence

irama
definition
noun
the measured cadences that he employed in the Senate
a modulation or inflection of the voice.
the final cadences of the Prelude
a sequence of notes or chords comprising the close of a musical phrase.
example
While some ministers complained that most employees tried to do as little work as possible, others stressed that the type and 'cadence' of industrial work made it much less interesting and intrinsically meaningful.
Where they strove manfully for their effects, he wrote poems whose 'cadence' leads one to believe that they had just floated out.
The gear should allow you to hit 150 rpm (bike computers that measure 'cadence' can help).
After a training ride, the group analyzes his power output, average speed, distance, heart rate, 'cadence' , and time, then adjusts the champ's workouts accordingly.
She walks the earth with a heavy confidence, an irrepressible swagger and 'cadence' , due to those nighttime reflections.
Chapter 8 is developed in prose that is remarkable for its oracular 'cadence' , one that temporarily arrests the flow of the narrative.
It's common for offensive tackles to time the quarterback's 'cadence' with the snap so they quickly can get into their protection stances.
The timbre and 'cadence' of his drawling voice startle at first and the listener becomes absorbed by his speech rhythms, pauses, and inflections.
Self-carriage, 'cadence' , rhythm, and hock engagement at all three gaits with the same speed and frame were the standards on which to judge.
His voice lacks the distinctive 'cadence' for which he would become known, but there's no denying the presence he brings to the part.
Waiting for the closing 'cadence' , a harbinger of your distraction, is like waiting for the poppy buds to split open and spill their compressed warmth, their inevitable defeat.
The themes live through a language buzzing with resonance and 'cadence' , a hallucinatory, burlesque fusion that demands to be read aloud.
He asks short questions but gives long answers, and there's something vaguely patrician about the 'cadence' of his speech.
He rode, his legs firing out the familiar high 'cadence' .
They have 'cadence' and a rhythm together, moving together easily, even in tight spaces.
‘The most efficient 'cadence' is between 90 and 110 RPMs,’ she says.
At that point, Timmy got up and started clapping in a slow rhythmic 'cadence' .
But due to the brevity of the arrangements, within a few bars the music takes a sharp and often abrupt turn to the final 'cadence' in ways that are disruptive to a listener or a pianist familiar with the original themes.
He also should constantly be developing an ear for the 'cadence' and inflection of the languages.
try to vary your 'cadence' during a run
The rhythmic 'cadence' of the poetry was not the iambic pentameter or other such metrical patterns but free verse with words scattered randomly across the printed page.
Supplication, of course, also carries a religious overtone; his plea to Poetry may be secular in name, but it has the 'cadence' of a prayer.
The poems acknowledge semi-articulate intimacies, their interrupted 'cadence' , a shrewd tenderness, a tang.
Carl is also very sensitive to the syllabic pulse of a poem, and writes in a subtle music that correlates meaning with 'cadence' .
The shooting hand grips it at the balance point and the arm swings in natural 'cadence' .
Neither too fast nor too slow, in an even one-two 'cadence' , swing the shih-tzu puppy in an arc from slightly below the level of your shoulders.
It may seem that way, but their dialogue is not written for a particular 'cadence' .
The full force of the chromatic harmony was thrilling, as in such details as the cellos' dissonant flattened 6th just before the final 'cadence' .
The text is laced with an ironic 'cadence' of the oral tradition.
The author constructs a narrative that closely resembles poetry in its 'cadence' , verse structure and imagery.
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