| beat |
The smallest division of action in a play. The length of time necessary for a character to play an "Objective" (also called "Intention") from beginning to end.
Ãâó: www.biography.ms/Acting_terms.html
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|---|---|
| beat |
Number of strokes per minute that crew is rowing; usually varies in three-mile race.
Ãâó: www.rit.edu/~934www/Stonehurst/about_glossary.html
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| beat |
heading in a direction into the wind
Ãâó: cbs.sportsline.com/sailing/americascup/glossary
|
| beat |
To get the ball through or around an opponent by dribbling or shooting.
Ãâó: users.erols.com/soccertip/dictionary/dictio02.htm
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| beat |
The basic pulse in music; the marking of metrical divisions by visual or audible means (tapping, counting out loud, pounding , etc.)
Ãâó: www.artsalive.ca/en/mus/musicresources/popDictiona...
|
| beat | a state of supreme happiness |
|---|---|
| beat | Roman Catholic |
| beat | declare (a dead person) to be blessed |
| beat | make blessedly happy |
| beat | fill with sublime emotion |
| beat | the act of inflicting corporal punishment with repeated blows |
| beat | the act of overcoming or outdoing |
| beat | expanding and contracting rhythmically as to the beating of the heart |
| beat | a musical instrument that sounds by means of a reed |
| beat | one of the eight sayings of Jesus at the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount |
| beat | a state of supreme happiness |
| beat | a rock group from Liverpool who between 1962 and 1970 produced a variety of hit songs and albums (most of it written by Paul McCartney and John Lennon) |
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