| -meter |
A basic music term, but sometimes not fully understood. The organization of the beats of time (or ground beat), moving at a certain rate (the tempo), into groupings which are heirarchical, that is, there is a unit of a stated number of beats (the bar) which includes strong and weak beats in an organized pattern. All this is implied by a 'meter' of 4/4, 3/4, etc.
Ãâó: www.apassion4jazz.net/glossary2.html
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| -meter |
The pattern in which a steady succession of rhythmic pulses is organized.
Ãâó: ci.kern.org/VAPA/stories/storyReader$108
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| -meter |
A meter is a process which examines a stream of packets on a communications medium or between a pair of media. The meter records aggregate counts of packets belonging to flows between communicating entities. The assignment of packets to flows may be done by executing a series of rules. Meters can reasonably be implemented in any of three environments -- dedicated monitors, in routers or in general-purpose systems.
Ãâó: tiefighter.et.tudelft.nl/~arthur/aaa/aaaterms.html
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| -meter |
The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular sequence; established by the regular or almost regular recurrence of similar accent patterns (called feet). See feet and versification.
Ãâó: home.cfl.rr.com/eghsap/apterms.html
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| -meter |
The assay value multiplied by the number of feet, meters, inches, centimeters across which the sample is taken.
Ãâó: www.miningbasics.com/html/glossary.html
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