Beat definition

Beat





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10 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Scoop \Scoop\, n. [OE. scope, of Scand. origin; cf. Sw. skopa,
     akin to D. schop a shovel, G. sch["u]ppe, and also to E.
     shove. See {Shovel}.]
     1. A large ladle; a vessel with a long handle, used for
        dipping liquids; a utensil for bailing boats.
        [1913 Webster]


  
     2. A deep shovel, or any similar implement for digging out
        and dipping or shoveling up anything; as, a flour scoop;
        the scoop of a dredging machine.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. (Surg.) A spoon-shaped instrument, used in extracting
        certain substances or foreign bodies.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     4. A place hollowed out; a basinlike cavity; a hollow.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Some had lain in the scoop of the rock. --J. R.
                                                    Drake.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     5. A sweep; a stroke; a swoop.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     6. The act of scooping, or taking with a scoop or ladle; a
        motion with a scoop, as in dipping or shoveling.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     7. a quantity sufficient to fill a scoop; -- used especially
        for ice cream, dispensed with an ice cream scoop; as, an
        ice cream cone with two scoops.
        [PJC]
  
     8. an act of reporting (news, research results) before a
        rival; also called a {beat}. [Newspaper or laboratory
        cant]
        [Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]
  
     9. news or information; as, what's the scoop on John's
        divorce?. [informal]
        [PJC]
  
     {Scoop net}, a kind of hand net, used in fishing; also, a net
        for sweeping the bottom of a river.
  
     {Scoop wheel}, a wheel for raising water, having scoops or
        buckets attached to its circumference; a tympanum.
        [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Undulation \Un`du*la"tion\, n. [Cf. F. ondulation.]
     1. The act of undulating; a waving motion or vibration; as,
        the undulations of a fluid, of water, or of air; the
        undulations of sound.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. A wavy appearance or outline; waviness. --Evelyn.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. (Mus.)
        (a) The tremulous tone produced by a peculiar pressure of
            the finger on a string, as of a violin.
        (b) The pulsation caused by the vibrating together of two
            tones not quite in unison; -- called also {beat}.
            [1913 Webster]
  
     4. (Physics) A motion to and fro, up and down, or from side
        to side, in any fluid or elastic medium, propagated
        continuously among its particles, but with no translation
        of the particles themselves in the direction of the
        propagation of the wave; a wave motion; a vibration.
        [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Beat \Beat\ (b[=e]t), v. t. [imp. {Beat}; p. p. {Beat},
     {Beaten}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Beating}.] [OE. beaten, beten, AS.
     be['a]tan; akin to Icel. bauta, OHG. b[=o]zan. Cf. 1st
     {Butt}, {Button}.]
     1. To strike repeatedly; to lay repeated blows upon; as, to
        beat one's breast; to beat iron so as to shape it; to beat
        grain, in order to force out the seeds; to beat eggs and
        sugar; to beat a drum.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Thou shalt beat some of it [spices] very small.
                                                    --Ex. xxx. 36.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              They did beat the gold into thin plates. --Ex.
                                                    xxxix. 3.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. To punish by blows; to thrash.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. To scour or range over in hunting, accompanied with the
        noise made by striking bushes, etc., for the purpose of
        rousing game.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              To beat the woods, and rouse the bounding prey.
                                                    --Prior.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     4. To dash against, or strike, as with water or wind.
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              A frozen continent . . . beat with perpetual storms.
                                                    --Milton.
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     5. To tread, as a path.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Pass awful gulfs, and beat my painful way.
                                                    --Blackmore.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     6. To overcome in a battle, contest, strife, race, game,
        etc.; to vanquish, defeat, or conquer; to surpass or be
        superior to.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              He beat them in a bloody battle.      --Prescott.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              For loveliness, it would be hard to beat that. --M.
                                                    Arnold.
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     7. To cheat; to chouse; to swindle; to defraud; -- often with
        out. [Colloq.]
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     8. To exercise severely; to perplex; to trouble.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Why should any one . . . beat his head about the
              Latin grammar who does not intend to be a critic?
                                                    --Locke.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     9. (Mil.) To give the signal for, by beat of drum; to sound
        by beat of drum; as, to beat an alarm, a charge, a parley,
        a retreat; to beat the general, the reveille, the tattoo.
        See {Alarm}, {Charge}, {Parley}, etc.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     10. to baffle or stump; to defy the comprehension of (a
         person); as, it beats me why he would do that.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     11. to evade, avoid, or escape (blame, taxes, punishment);
         as, to beat the rap (be acquitted); to beat the sales tax
         by buying out of state.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     {To beat down}, to haggle with (any one) to secure a lower
        price; to force down. [Colloq.]
  
     {To beat into}, to teach or instill, by repetition.
  
     {To beat off}, to repel or drive back.
  
     {To beat out}, to extend by hammering.
  
     {To beat out of} a thing, to cause to relinquish it, or give
        it up. "Nor can anything beat their posterity out of it to
        this day." --South.
  
     {To beat the dust}. (Man.)
         (a) To take in too little ground with the fore legs, as a
             horse.
         (b) To perform curvets too precipitately or too low.
  
     {To beat the hoof}, to walk; to go on foot.
  
     {To beat the wing}, to flutter; to move with fluttering
        agitation.
  
     {To beat time}, to measure or regulate time in music by the
        motion of the hand or foot.
  
     {To beat up}, to attack suddenly; to alarm or disturb; as, to
        beat up an enemy's quarters.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     Syn: To strike; pound; bang; buffet; maul; drub; thump;
          baste; thwack; thrash; pommel; cudgel; belabor; conquer;
          defeat; vanquish; overcome.
          [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Beat \Beat\, v. i.
     1. To strike repeatedly; to inflict repeated blows; to knock
        vigorously or loudly.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The men of the city . . . beat at the door.
                                                    --Judges. xix.
                                                    22.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. To move with pulsation or throbbing.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              A thousand hearts beat happily.       --Byron.
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     3. To come or act with violence; to dash or fall with force;
        to strike anything, as rain, wind, and waves do.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Sees rolling tempests vainly beat below. --Dryden.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              They [winds] beat at the crazy casement.
                                                    --Longfellow.
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              The sun beat upon the head of Jonah, that he
              fainted, and wished in himself to die. --Jonah iv.
                                                    8.
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              Public envy seemeth to beat chiefly upon ministers.
                                                    --Bacon.
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     4. To be in agitation or doubt. [Poetic]
        [1913 Webster]
  
              To still my beating mind.             --Shak.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     5. (Naut.) To make progress against the wind, by sailing in a
        zigzag line or traverse.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     6. To make a sound when struck; as, the drums beat.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     7. (Mil.) To make a succession of strokes on a drum; as, the
        drummers beat to call soldiers to their quarters.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     8. (Acoustics & Mus.) To sound with more or less rapid
        alternations of greater and less intensity, so as to
        produce a pulsating effect; -- said of instruments, tones,
        or vibrations, not perfectly in unison.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     {A beating wind} (Naut.), a wind which necessitates tacking
        in order to make progress.
  
     {To beat about}, to try to find; to search by various means
        or ways. --Addison.
  
     {To beat about the bush}, to approach a subject circuitously.
        
  
     {To beat up and down} (Hunting), to run first one way and
        then another; -- said of a stag.
  
     {To beat up for recruits}, to go diligently about in order to
        get helpers or participators in an enterprise.
  
     {To beat the rap}, to be acquitted of an accusation; --
        especially, by some sly or deceptive means, rather than to
        be proven innocent.
        [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Beat \Beat\, a.
     Weary; tired; fatigued; exhausted. [Colloq.]
     [1913 Webster]
  
           Quite beat, and very much vexed and disappointed.
                                                    --Dickens.
     [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Beat \Beat\, n.
     1. One that beats, or surpasses, another or others; as, the
        beat of him. [Colloq.]
        [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
  
     2. The act of one that beats a person or thing; as:
        (a) (Newspaper Cant) The act of obtaining and publishing a
            piece of news by a newspaper before its competitors;
            also, the news itself; -- also called a {scoop} or
            {exclusive}.
            [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
  
                  It's a beat on the whole country. --Scribner's
                                                    Mag.
            [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
        (b) (Hunting) The act of scouring, or ranging over, a
            tract of land to rouse or drive out game; also, those
            so engaged, collectively. "Driven out in the course of
            a beat." --Encyc. of Sport.
            [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
  
                  Bears coming out of holes in the rocks at the
                  last moment, when the beat is close to them.
                                                    --Encyc. of
                                                    Sport.
            [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
        (c) (Fencing) A smart tap on the adversary's blade.
            [Webster 1913 Suppl.]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Beat \Beat\, n.
     1. A stroke; a blow.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              He, with a careless beat,
              Struck out the mute creation at a heat. --Dryden.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. A recurring stroke; a throb; a pulsation; as, a beat of
        the heart; the beat of the pulse.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. (Mus.)
        (a) The rise or fall of the hand or foot, marking the
            divisions of time; a division of the measure so
            marked. In the rhythm of music the beat is the unit.
        (b) A transient grace note, struck immediately before the
            one it is intended to ornament.
            [1913 Webster]
  
     4. (Acoustics & Mus.) A sudden swelling or re["e]nforcement
        of a sound, recurring at regular intervals, and produced
        by the interference of sound waves of slightly different
        periods of vibrations; applied also, by analogy, to other
        kinds of wave motions; the pulsation or throbbing produced
        by the vibrating together of two tones not quite in
        unison. See {Beat}, v. i., 8.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     5. A round or course which is frequently gone over; as, a
        watchman's beat; analogously, for newspaper reporters, the
        subject or territory that they are assigned to cover; as,
        the Washington beat.
        [1913 Webster +PJC]
  
     6. A place of habitual or frequent resort.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     7. A cheat or swindler of the lowest grade; -- often
        emphasized by dead; as, a dead beat; also, {deadbeat}.
        [Low]
        [1913 Webster]
  
     {Beat of drum} (Mil.), a succession of strokes varied, in
        different ways, for particular purposes, as to regulate a
        march, to call soldiers to their arms or quarters, to
        direct an attack, or retreat, etc.
  
     {Beat of a watch}, or {Beat of a clock}, the stroke or sound
        made by the action of the escapement. A clock is in beat
        or out of beat, according as the stroke is at equal or
        unequal intervals.
        [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

  beat
       adj : very tired; "was all in at the end of the day"; "so beat I
             could flop down and go to sleep anywhere"; "bushed
             after all that exercise"; "I'm dead after that long
             trip" [syn: {all in(p)}, {beat(p)}, {bushed(p)}, {dead(p)}]
       n 1: a regular route for a sentry or policeman; "in the old days
            a policeman walked a beat and knew all his people by
            name" [syn: {round}]
       2: the rhythmic contraction and expansion of the arteries with
          each beat of the heart; "he could feel the beat of her
          heart" [syn: {pulse}, {pulsation}, {heartbeat}]
       3: the basic rhythmic unit in a piece of music; "the piece has
          a fast rhythm"; "the conductor set the beat" [syn: {rhythm},
           {musical rhythm}]
       4: a single pulsation of an oscillation produced by adding two
          waves of different frequencies; has a frequency equal to
          the difference between the two oscillations
       5: a member of the beat generation; a nonconformist in dress
          and behavior [syn: {beatnik}]
       6: the sound of stroke or blow; "he heard the beat of a drum"
       7: (prosody) the accent in a metrical foot of verse [syn: {meter},
           {metre}, {measure}, {cadence}]
       8: a regular rate of repetition; "the cox raised the beat"
       9: a stroke or blow; "the signal was two beats on the steam
          pipe"
       10: the act of beating to windward; sailing as close as possible
           to the direction from which the wind is blowing
       v 1: come out better in a competition, race, or conflict; "Agassi
            beat Becker in the tennis championship"; "We beat the
            competition"; "Harvard defeated Yale in the last
            football game" [syn: {beat out}, {crush}, {shell}, {trounce},
             {vanquish}]
       2: give a beating to; subject to a beating, either as a
          punishment or as an act of aggression; "Thugs beat him up
          when he walked down the street late at night"; "The
          teacher used to beat the students" [syn: {beat up}, {work
          over}]
       3: hit repeatedly; "beat on the door"; "beat the table with his
          shoe"
       4: move rhythmically; "Her heart was beating fast" [syn: {pound},
           {thump}]
       5: shape by beating; "beat swords into ploughshares"
       6: make a rhythmic sound; "Rain drummed against the
          windshield"; "The drums beat all night" [syn: {drum}, {thrum}]
       7: glare or strike with great intensity; "The sun was beating
          down on us"
       8: move with a thrashing motion; "The bird flapped its wings";
          "The eagle beat its wings and soared high into the sky"
          [syn: {flap}]
       9: sail with much tacking or with difficulty; "The boat beat in
          the strong wind"
       10: stir vigorously; "beat the egg whites"; "beat the cream"
           [syn: {scramble}]
       11: strike (a part of one's own body) repeatedly, as in great
           emotion or in accompaniment to music; "beat one's
           breast"; "beat one's foot rhythmically"
       12: be superior; "Reading beats watching television"; "This sure
           beats work!"
       13: avoid paying; "beat the subway fare" [syn: {bunk}]
       14: make a sound like a clock or a timer; "the clocks were
           ticking"; "the grandfather clock beat midnight" [syn: {tick},
            {ticktock}, {ticktack}]
       15: move with a flapping motion; "The bird's wings were
           flapping" [syn: {flap}]
       16: indicate by beating, as with the fingers or drumsticks;
           "Beat the rhythm"
       17: move with or as if with a regular alternating motion; "the
           city pulsated with music and excitement" [syn: {pulsate},
            {quiver}]
       18: make by pounding or trampling; "beat a path through the
           forest"
       19: produce a rhythm by striking repeatedly; "beat the drum"
       20: strike (water or bushes) repeatedly to rouse animals for
           hunting
       21: beat through cleverness and wit; "I beat the traffic"; "She
           outfoxed her competitors" [syn: {outwit}, {overreach}, {outsmart},
            {outfox}, {circumvent}]
       22: be a mystery or bewildering to; "This beats me!"; "Got me--I
           don't know the answer!"; "a vexing problem"; "This
           question really stuck me" [syn: {perplex}, {vex}, {stick},
            {get}, {puzzle}, {mystify}, {baffle}, {pose}, {bewilder},
            {flummox}, {stupefy}, {nonplus}, {gravel}, {amaze}, {dumbfound}]
       23: wear out completely; "This kind of work exhausts me"; "I'm
           beat"; "He was all washed up after the exam" [syn: {exhaust},
            {wash up}, {tucker}, {tucker out}]
       [also: {beaten}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 [moby-thes]:

  826 Moby Thesaurus words for "beat":
     Alexandrine, Bohemian, about ship, abrade, abscond, accent,
     accentuation, addle, addled, aerate, agitate, air lane, all in,
     all up with, alternation, amaze, ambit, amphibrach, amphimacer,
     anacrusis, anapest, andante tempo, antispast, area, arena,
     arrhythmia, arsis, article, at a loss, atomize, bacchius,
     back and fill, baffle, baffled, bailiwick, balk, bamboozle,
     bamboozled, bang, bar beat, barnacle, barrage, bash, baste,
     bastinado, baton, batter, bear away, bear off, bear the palm,
     bear to starboard, beat a ruffle, beat a tattoo, beat about,
     beat all hollow, beat hollow, beat it, beat off, beat the drum,
     beat time, beat to windward, beat up, beaten, beaten path, beating,
     beguile of, belabor, belt, best, bested, better, bicker, bilk,
     birch, blend, blow, bludgeon, boggle, bone-weary, border,
     borderland, bout, box off, bray, break, breakaway, brecciate,
     bring about, bring round, broke, bruise, budget of news, buffalo,
     buffaloed, buffet, bunco, bung, bung up, bureaucracy,
     bureaucratism, burn, burn out, bushed, busted, cadence, cadency,
     caesura, cane, cant, cant round, cast, cast about, catalexis,
     change course, change the heading, chase, cheat, chinoiserie,
     chisel, chloriamb, chloriambus, chouse, chouse out of, churn,
     churn up, circle, circuit, circumvent, clobber, close-haul, clout,
     club, cog, cog the dice, colon, comb, come about, comminute,
     compound time, con, confound, confounded, conquer, contriturate,
     contuse, convulse, copy, count, count the beats, counterpoint,
     course, cowhide, cozen, cream, cretic, crib, crumb, crumble, crush,
     cudgel, curry, cut, cycle, cyclicalness, dactyl,
     dactylic hexameter, daily grind, dance, dash, daze, dazed, dead,
     dead-and-alive, dead-tired, deadbeat, debilitate, defeat, defeated,
     defraud, demesne, depart, department, destroy, diaeresis, diastole,
     diddle, dimeter, din, ding, dipody, disappoint, disarrange,
     discipline, discomfited, discompose, disintegrate, disquiet,
     disturb, do, do in, do out of, do up, dochmiac, dog, dog-tired,
     dog-weary, domain, dominion, done, done for, done in, done up,
     double a point, down, downbeat, drained, drive, drive away,
     drive off, drub, drum, drum music, drumbeat, drumfire, drumming,
     duff, dump, duple time, elegiac, elegiac couplet,
     elegiac pentameter, emphasis, enervate, epitrite, euchre, exceed,
     excel, excite, exclusive, exhaust, exhausted, fag, fag out, fagged,
     fagged out, falcon, fallen, far out, fashion, fatigue, fatigued,
     feminine caesura, ferment, fetch about, field, finagle, fix, fixed,
     flag, flagellate, flail, flam, flap, flat, flat broke, fleece,
     flick, flicker, flight path, flimflam, flip, flit, flitter, flog,
     floor, floored, flop, flour, flurry, flush, flutter, foam, fob,
     foil, follow the hounds, foot, forage, forge, form, fowl, fragment,
     frazzle, free and easy, freeloader, fret, fringy, froth, fuddle,
     fuddled, fudge, full circle, fustigate, get, give a whipping,
     give the stick, go about, go hunting, go pitapat, gone, gouge,
     grain, granulate, granulize, grate, grind, grind to powder, groove,
     grub, gull, gun, gutter, gybe, gyp, hammer, harass, have, hawk,
     heartbeat, heartthrob, heave round, hemisphere, heptameter,
     heptapody, heretical, heroic couplet, heterodox, hexameter,
     hexapody, hide, hippie, hit the road, hocus, hocus-pocus,
     hors de combat, horsewhip, hound, hunt, hunt down, iamb, iambic,
     iambic pentameter, ictus, in a dilemma, in suspense, informal,
     intermittence, intermittency, ionic, itinerary, jack, jacklight,
     jade, jibe, jibe all standing, jingle, jog trot, judicial circuit,
     jurisdiction, keep in suspense, keep time, kinky, knock, knock out,
     knock up, knocked out, knout, lace, lam, lambaste, lap, largo,
     larrup, lash, lather, lathered, lay on, leave, leech,
     level of stress, levigate, lick, licked, lilt, line, loop, luff,
     luff up, make, manhandle, mantle, march, march tempo,
     masculine caesura, mash, master, maul, maverick, maze, measure,
     meter, metrical accent, metrical foot, metrical group,
     metrical unit, metrics, metron, mill, miss stays, mix, mixed times,
     molossus, mora, mould, movement, muddle, muddled, mulct, muss up,
     mystified, mystify, news item, nonplus, nonplussed, not cricket,
     not done, not kosher, number, numbers, offbeat, on tenterhooks,
     on the skids, oofless, orb, orbit, original, oscillation, outclass,
     outdo, outdone, outfight, outgeneral, outmaneuver, outpoint,
     outrun, outsail, outshine, outstrip, overborne, overcome,
     overfatigue, overmastered, overmatched, overpowered, overreach,
     overridden, overstrain, overthrown, overtire, overturned,
     overweary, overwhelm, overwhelmed, pack the deal, paddle, paeon,
     pale, palpitate, palpitation, panicked, pant, paradiddle, parasite,
     paste, path, patter, pelt, pendulum motion, pentameter, pentapody,
     period, periodicalness, periodicity, perplex, perplexed, perturb,
     perturbate, pestle, piece, pigeon, pinch, pistol-whip,
     piston motion, pitapat, pitter-patter, play drum, played out, ply,
     pommel, poop, poop out, pooped, pooped out, pound, pounding,
     powder, practice fraud upon, precinct, presto, prevail,
     prevail over, primary stress, primrose path, proceleusmatic,
     prosodics, prosody, prostrate, province, prowl after, pulsate,
     pulsation, pulse, pulverize, pummel, put, put about, put back,
     put to rout, puzzle, puzzled, pyrrhic, quantity, quiver, rag,
     ragtime, rake, ransack, rap, rat-a-tat, rat-tat, rat-tat-tat,
     rataplan, rattattoo, rawhide, ready to drop, realm, reappearance,
     recurrence, red tape, red-tapeism, reduce to powder,
     regular wave motion, reoccurrence, return, revolution, rhyme,
     rhythm, rhythmic pattern, rhythmical stress, ride to hounds, rile,
     ripple, rise above, road, roil, roll, rook, rotation, rough up,
     roughen, round, round a point, round trip, rounds, rout, route,
     routed, routine, rub-a-dub, rubato, ruff, ruffle, ruin, ruined,
     rummage, rumple, run, run away, run off, rut, sail fine, scam,
     scattered, scoop, scourge, screw, scrunch, scum, sea lane, search,
     seasonality, secondary stress, sell gold bricks, series, settle,
     settled, sextuple time, shake, shake up, shape, shard, shave,
     sheer, shellac, shift, shikar, shoot, shortchange, shortcut, shred,
     silenced, simple time, skin, skin alive, skinned, skinned alive,
     slat, sledgehammer, slew, smash, smear, smell-feast, smite,
     smother, sound a tattoo, spank, spatter, spell, spent, sphere,
     splatter, splutter, spondee, sponge, sponger, sport, spot news,
     sprung rhythm, spume, sputter, squash, squirrel cage, staccato,
     stack the cards, stalk, stampeded, start, stick, still-hunt, sting,
     stir, stir up, stone-broke, stony, story, strap, strapped, stress,
     stress accent, stress pattern, strike, stripe, stroke, stuck,
     stump, stumped, subdiscipline, subdue, sud, suds, surmount,
     surpass, swerve, swindle, swing, swing round, swing the stern,
     swinge, swirl, switch, syncopation, syncope, systole, syzygy, tack,
     take a dive, tan, tap, tat-tat, tattoo, tempo, tempo rubato,
     tertiary stress, tetrameter, tetrapody, tetraseme, thesis,
     thimblerig, thrash, three-quarter time, thresh, throb, throbbing,
     throw, throw a fight, throw about, thrown, thrum, thump, thumping,
     thwart, tick, ticktock, time, time pattern, timing, tire, tire out,
     tire to death, tired out, tired to death, tom-tom, top,
     touch the wind, tour, track, trade route, trail, traject,
     trajectory, trajet, trample, transcend, tread, treadmill, tribrach,
     trim, trimeter, trimmed, triple time, triplet, tripody, triseme,
     triturate, triumph, triumph over, trochee, trouble, trounce,
     trounced, truncheon, tucker, tuckered out, turn, turn back,
     two-four time, unconventional, undo, undone, undulation,
     unfashionable, unorthodox, upbeat, upset, use up, used up,
     vanquish, veer, victimize, waggle, walk, wallop, waltz time,
     washed-up, wave, waver, way out, weak stress, weaken, wear,
     wear down, wear on, wear out, wear ship, weary, weary unto death,
     well-worn groove, whack, whacked, whale, wheel, whelmed, whip,
     whip up, whipped, whisk, whop, wilt, win, wind, wiped out, work up,
     worn out, worn-out, worst, worsted, yaw
  
  

From Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (Version 1.9, June 2002) [vera]:

  BEAT
       Best Enhanced Advanced Technology (Trident, AT)
       
       

















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