verb (used with object)
to place (the accents) on beats that are normally unaccented.
Syncopate comes from Late Latin 莽聆紳釵棗梯櫻喧喝莽, the past participle of the verb 莽聆紳釵棗梯櫻娶梗, a derivative of the noun syncopa or 莽聆紳釵棗梯襲, which has two senses: a grammatical sense the contraction of a word by omitting one or more sounds from the middle, as never becoming ne’er, and a medical sense swooning, fainting away. Syncopa and 莽聆紳釵棗梯襲 come from the Greek noun 莽聆紳域棗梯廎, which has the same meanings as the Latin, developments of its basic meaning a cutting up into small pieces. Syncopate entered English in the early 17th century.
I juxtapose the rhythms, and Isyncopatethem to make the piece create the jazz feeling that I’d like to get.
Finding syncopation in jazz is about as difficult as finding water in the ocean. It is the cornerstone of one of the principal sources of jazz rhythm, ragtime melody, so much so that to “rag a melody” and (a decade or so later) to “jazz up a melody” meant, in part, to syncopate it.
noun
a slight trace, as of a particular taste or flavor.
To the Frenchless, 莽棗喝梯癟棗紳 looks as if it means soupspoon. In fact 莽棗喝梯癟棗紳 means a hint, trace, from Old French 莽棗喝梯梗癟棗紳, 莽棗喝莽梯梗癟棗紳, literally suspicion, anxious worry, from Late Latin 莽喝莽梯梗釵喧勳紳– (stem of 莽喝莽梯梗釵喧勳), for Latin 莽喝莽梯蘋釵勳紳– distrust, mistrust, suspicion. 釦棗喝梯癟棗紳 entered English in the 18th century.
First, she repeated it rapturously in an enthusiastic contralto with a 莽棗喝梯癟棗紳 of Southern accent …泭
big summer movies, even the successful ones, are designed to be forgettable, passing through our system at precisely the same rate as a pint of Pepsi. Nothing is left but fizzing nerve ends and a sugary 莽棗喝梯癟棗紳 of rot.
verb (used with or without object)
to attempt to influence or pressure by persuasion rather than by the exertion of force or one's authority, as in urging voluntary compliance with economic guidelines.
The slang use of jawbone, to attempt to influence or pressure by persuasion rather than by force or authority as in urging voluntary compliance with economic guidelines, originated in the U.S. Students of political history will associate it Lyndon Baines Johnson, who was a master of jawboning when he was Senate majority leader. Jawbone, a compound of jaw and bone meaning “a bone of the jaw,” entered English in the late 15th century.
Johnson had a legendary ability to “jawbone” members of Congress into accepting his positions ….
And if we think one goes too far, we initially try to jawbone the governors into rolling them back or adjusting them.