Definition of Rhythmists

1. rhythmist [n] - See also: rhythmist

Lexicographical Neighbors of Rhythmists

rhythmic
rhythmic chorea
rhythmic gesture
rhythmic gestures
rhythmic gymnastics
rhythmic pattern
rhythmic unit
rhythmic units
rhythmical
rhythmically
rhythmicities
rhythmicity
rhythmics
rhythming
rhythmist
rhythmists (current term)
rhythmite
rhythmites
rhythmization
rhythmizations
rhythmize
rhythmized
rhythmizes
rhythmizing
rhythmless
rhythmlessly
rhythmometer
rhythmometers
rhythms
rhythmus

Literary usage of Rhythmists

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Essays Philological and Critical: Selected from the Papers by James Hadley (1873)
"And thus no well-informed scholar would think of constructing a complete metric from the doctrines of the rhythmists : for this purpose we must have ..."

2. Essays Philological and Critical: Selected from the Papers by James Hadley (1873)
"And thus no well-informed scholar would think of constructing a complete metric from the doctrines of the rhythmists : for this purpose we must have ..."

3. An Introduction to the Methods and Materials of Literary Criticism: The by Charles Mills Gayley, Fred. Newton Scott (1899)
"... Greek classical poetry from what it now is; (2) that Aristophanes and other ancient rhythmists worked not theoretically but inductively ; (3) that these ..."

4. An Introduction to the Methods and Materials of Literary Criticism: The by Charles Mills Gayley, Fred Newton Scott (1899)
"... poetry was entirely different in the ages of Greek classical poetry from what it now is; (2) that Aristophanes and other ancient rhythmists worked not ..."

5. Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Standard Work of Reference in Art, Literature (1907)
"... their time and country calls upon them to paint—born rhythmists who must sing, who translate everything external as well as internal into verbal melody. ..."

6. An American Anthology, 1787-1900: Selections Illustrating the Editor's by Edmund Clarence Stedman (1900)
"... the art of the laureate and his school there was little to choose in technical matters between English and American rhythmists, Landor always excepted. ..."

7. Victorian Poets by Edmund Clarence ( Stedman (1901)
"... and to show by many illustrations, that he is the most sovereign of rhythmists. He compels the inflexible elements to his use. Chaucer is more limpid, ..."

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