syncopator
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syncopator — noun see syncopate … New Collegiate Dictionary
syncopator — syn·co·pa·tor … English syllables
syncopator — noun a musician who plays syncopated jazz music (usually in a dance band) they called themselves the Dixie Syncopators • Derivationally related forms: ↑syncopate • Hypernyms: ↑jazz musician, ↑jazzman … Useful english dictionary
syncopate — syncopator, n. /sing keuh payt , sin /, v.t., syncopated, syncopating. 1. Music. a. to place (the accents) on beats that are normally unaccented. b. to treat (a passage, piece, etc.) in this way. 2. Gram. to contract (a word) by omitting one or… … Universalium
syncopate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Date: 1605 1. a. to shorten or produce by syncope < syncopate suppose to s pose > b. to cut short ; clip, abbreviate 2. to modify or affect (musical rhythm) by syncopation • syncopator … New Collegiate Dictionary
Getty H. Huffine — Getty Herschel Huffine (1889 1947) was an American music composer, trombonist and tuba player. He was born in Bowling Green, Kentucky on August 25, 1889 (best information found in county clerk s office), the eldest of 4 children (Smith). He was… … Wikipedia
Arthur Briggs — (b. April 9, 1899; d. July 15, 1991 in Paris) was a black American Jazz trumpeter and orchestra leader who performed in Europe.Briggs played with Will Marion Cook at the end of the 1910s. In the early 1920s, he emigrated to Europe. In 1927, he… … Wikipedia
Meal Ticket — For other uses, see Mealticket. Meal Ticket Origin London, United Kingdom Genres Country rock Years active 1970s Past members … Wikipedia
syncopate — [ sɪŋkəpeɪt] verb 1》 [usu. as adjective syncopated] displace the beats or accents in (music or a rhythm) so that strong beats become weak and vice versa. 2》 Grammar shorten by syncope. Derivatives syncopation noun syncopator noun … English new terms dictionary
syncopate — /ˈsɪŋkəpeɪt / (say singkuhpayt) verb (t) (syncopated, syncopating) 1. Music a. to place (the accents) on beats which are normally unaccented. b. to employ notes so affected in (a passage, piece, etc.). 2. Phonetics to contract (a word) by… …